360pp. 8vo. Original pictorial cloth. Colour frontis. and illustrations. A fine copy in slipcase.
Published by The Folio Society, London, 1979
Seller: Back in Time Rare Books, ABAA, FABA, Jacksonville, FL, U.S.A.
Hardcover. Condition: Near Fine. Limited Edition. 6 1/4 X 10 Inches. 359 PP. Illustrated deluxe edition of the exploratory journey of Charles Darwin along the South American coastline. Deluxe edition housed in original issue slipcase. Early Folio Society edition. A sharp copy.
Published by Folio Society, 1979
Seller: Cheerleader Productions Ltd, Gloucester, United Kingdom
US$ 41.51
Quantity: 1 available
Add to basketHardcover. Condition: New. Brand new unread hardback in like new slipcase.Slipcase has the residue of a sticky label and minor tear, book is immaculate. Folio Society 1977. 3rd impression 1979. 6 1/4 X 10 Inches. 359pp. Illustrated deluxe edition of the exploratory journey of Charles Darwin along the South American coastline. Deluxe edition housed in original issue slipcase, coloured portrait frontispiece, coloured plates and endpaper maps, pictorial cloth, gilt back, brown top, endpaper map. Octavo, pictorial cloth binding lettered gilt to spine, 12 leaves of plates, colour illustrations, 1 map (on lining papers), colour portraits, 26 cm. A beautifully produced edition Edited by David Stanbury this is a narrative account of the voyage of the Beagle pieced together from the writings of Darwin, the Captain Robert Fitzroy and the letters of Midshipman Phillip King and 2nd Lieutenant Sulivan. Together they tell not only the story of their journey and its significance, but offer differing and intriguing perspectives. Pictorial hardcovers with decorated endpapers showing their route. A host of colour plates by Conrad Martens, the great landscape painter, who accompanied the voyage. Complete with slipcase . The voyage of H.M.S. Beagle during which Charles Darwin was a passenger formed the central part of a series of three expeditions mounted by the Admiralty to survey and chart the South American coastline. This process started in 1826 and continued until 1837. One of the 170 major surveying expeditions sent out by Sir Francis Beaufort of the Hydrographic Department in the autumn of 1831, was commanded by Captain Robert FitzRoy and was to take H.M.S. Beagle on her second voyage to the coasts of South America. Captain FitzRoy furnished the Admiralty with 82 coastal sheets, 80 plans of harbours and 40 views covering the southern portions of the continent of South America. He gained considerable public honour and recognition, and received the Royal Geographical Society's medal in 1837, establishing himself as a first-rate hydrographer and surveyor. We pack our books properly and ship daily from the UK.
Published by Henry Colburn, London, 1839
First Edition
US$ 69,186.52
Quantity: 1 available
Add to basketHardback. Condition: Good+. First Edition. First edition, early issue, 3 vols in 4, 8vo, ownership signature to half-title vol. I, title vol. II, half-title vol. III; 9 folding engraved maps by J. Gardner and J. & C. Walker; 47 etched plates after P. King, A. Earle, C. Martens, R. Fitzroy and others, original blue blind stamped cloth gilt, glazed yellow endpapers, vols I-III neatly recased preserving majority of original spines, inner hinges of vols I-III neatly strengthened. This set with the following early issue points: the half-title to vol. III does not contain the initials F.R.S. after Darwin's name thus denoting an early printing of the preliminaries prior to Darwin becoming a Fellow of the Royal Society on 24th January 1839, all spines imprinted Colburn / London rather than London / Colburn, each volume bears the author's name, lacking from later issues, this set without advertisements as sometimes and as noted by Freeman, light foxing and stains to frontispiece and plates vol. II, overall a good clean set with important Australian provenance. Darwin's first published, and his most widely read book: the account of the most important 19th-century voyage. On this voyage Darwin prepare for his life's work, ultimately leading to The Origin of the Species.From the library of Charles Joseph LaTrobe, Superintendent of the Port Phillip District of New South Wales from 1839 to 1851, and from 1st July 1851 (until his departure three years later) the first Lieutenant-Governor of the Colony of Victoria; with his distinctive signature to all three volumes. An evangelical Christian (his father was a leader of the Moravian Church), LaTrobe spent fifteen years in the Australian colonies, leaving in 1854 a disillusioned and dispirited man. His time in office coincided with a period of tremendous expansion, with major infrastructure projects (roads and sanitation being a priority) however much of central Melbourne's green landscape can be put down to LaTrobe's foresight in preserving this land as open space. On his arrival in Port Phillip LaTrobe's first speech put him at odds with the settlers of the District. These pioneers were looking to better their lot, expecting grants of land which would lead to the dispossession of the aboriginal peoples, yet LaTrobe spoke of different priorities: 'It is not by individual aggrandisement, by the possession of numerous flocks or herds, or by costly acres, that the people shall secure for the country enduring prosperity and happiness, but by the acquisition and maintenance of sound religious and moral institutions without which no country can become truly great'. This clash of ideas was highlighted by Darwin in his Journal of The Voyages of HMS Beagle, published a few months before LaTrobe made his speech. In it Darwin observed that in 'the wide extent of the Americas, Polynesia, the Cape of Good Hope, and Australia' the native populations were being suppressed. 'The varieties of man', he noted, 'seem to act on each other in the same way as different species of animals the stronger always extirpating the weaker.' This theory of the survival of the fittest became the justification for many colonists in the removal of indigenous peoples from their native land. Darwin was given the third volume The Voyages of HMS Beagle, writing 'I am to have the third volume, in which I intend giving a kind of journal of a naturalist, not following however always the order of time, but rather the order of position' The first volume contains King's account of the expedition in the Adventure made between 1826 and 1830, which surveyed the coasts of Patagonia and Tierra del Fuego; and the second (and its appendix volume) describes the narrative of the Beagle's second voyage under Capt. Fitzroy made between 1831 and 1836 to South America, the Galapagos Islands, Tahiti, New Zealand, Australia, and other islands and countries. 'The five years of the voyage were the most important event in Darwin's intellectual life and in the history of biological science. Darwin sailed with no formal scientific training. He returned a hard-headed man of science, knowing the importance of evidence, almost convinced that species had not always been as they were since the creation but had undergone change . The experiences of his five years . and what they led to, built up into a process of epoch-making importance in the history of thought' (DSB) Size: 4to.
Published by Published by Henry Colburn, 1839
US$ 3,459.33
Quantity: 1 available
Add to basketHardcover. Condition: Very Good. , Volume I xxviii, [4], 597 pp +errata. Volume II xiv [2], 694 pp. Appendix Volume,viii, 352 pp., 54 black and white plates which include 7 folding maps (6 of which are loose). The loose maps are all facsimiles and not originals. First Edition , rebound, all three books in similar condition, externally clean and sound, a few small repairs to preliminary pages, a little scattered foxing to plates, vol 2 has water stains to early plates, overall in very good condition , quarter cream and pale blue paper over boards, black titles to spine labels, new endpapers , Octavo, 23.5 cm x 15 cm Hardback ISBN:
Published by Henry Colburn, London, 1839
Seller: Tinakori Books, Lower Hutt, New Zealand
First Edition
US$ 2,750.00
Quantity: 1 available
Add to basketFull-Leather. Condition: Good. First Edition. The first two volumes of the four volume set. Volume I - Proceedings of the First Expedition. 1826-1830 under command of Captain P. Parker King. xxviii, 2 l., 597pp; Vol. II. - Proceedings of the Second Expedition, 1831-1836 under the command of Captain Robert Fitzroy. xiv, 1 l., 694p, addenda, 41 plates including 2 frontispieces, lacking the four loose folding maps (2 maps in each volume) and the "Chart of a part of South America" in volume I. Volume II is lacking the title page but has the half-title page. Browning mostly front portions of both books and plates, some old marginal damp stains, both books in full tree calf bindings, recased with new marbled endpapers, using original spine strips, lower half of Vol. II spine strip sympathetically replaced. Gilt monogram of General Assembly library on both volumes. Please enquire if you are interested in purchasing volumes separately.