Language: English
Published by Humphrey Milford Oxford University Press, 1923
Seller: L G BOOKS, WEYMOUTH, United Kingdom
Fradelle & Young ( portrait) (illustrator). Full brown leather, decorative front board with monogram, plain end-papers, frontispiece portrait, all sides gilt, marker ribbon, 696 pages. Spine cocked, heavy wear and tears to leather around top of spine and rear board, wear at other extremities, some play in front hinge, name top of ffep, pages lightly tanned, otherwise good. 600 grams.
Hardcover. Condition: Good. Part 1: Representation of St. Agnes Virgin and Martyr of Jesus Christ. 60 double pages. Written in Italian on one page and in English on opposite. Each double page numbered as just one page. When in fact there are 120pp. The end dated 1558, Florence; Part 2: The Life of the Blessed Saint Agnes Virgin and Martyr In Prose and Verse by L. Sherling. 134 pp. All text in English; 3: Comedia Famosa El Cielo por los Cabellos Santa Ynes Des Tres Ingenios 88pp. + xxiv pages of explanatory text in English about the Comedia Famosa; 4: The Famous Drama,"Heaven by a Hairsbreadth" or St. Agnes by Three Wits. Translated from the Spanish by A de Alberti/ 136pp. Religious Pictures pasted inside and some loose as well. A labour of love. Address at beginning of book reads: "A. Fradelle Pratt San Raphael Hampton Wick. Title gilt on spine. Undated, but circa late nineteenth/early twentieth century. In a neat and clear hand throughout. Original item.
Seller: Douglas Stewart Fine Books, Armadale, VIC, Australia
Albumen print photograph, carte de visite format, 106 x 65 mm (mount); recto and verso with imprint of Fradelle & Marshall, Regent Street, London; verso also inscribed in pencil in period hand 'Minnie Walton'; the print is a little pale but in good condition, as is the mount. Minnie Walton was a popular Australian performer who married impresario Frederick Lyster. She died at an early age in San Francisco. The following is an extract from an obituary which appeared in The Era, London, 27 July 1879: "The deceased was a native of Sydney, New South Wales, and first came before the public as a vocalist. While fulfilling her professional engagements in America Miss Minnie Walton became the wife of Mr Frederick Lyster, who was associated with his brother, Mr W. Sauren Lyster, in the management of an English opera company. When that organisation visited California in 1868 Mr and Mrs Fred. Lyster accompanied the troop, and October 17th of that year Miss Minnie Walton ? for the maiden name was always retained for professional purposes ? made her first appearance as an actress as Eily O'Connor, in The Collen Bawn, at Maguire's Opera House, San Francisco. Her association with that company continued till the Californian Theatre was first opened, January 18th, 1869, when she transferred her services to that establishment, and there remained until the autumn of 1870. Her first appearance in New York was made at Wood's Museum, November 14th, 1870, when she was associated with the Lydia Thompson troupe, and played Venus, in Paris; or, the Apple of Discord. After a few weeks Miss Minnie Walton returned to San Francisco, and rejoined the California company, remaining with them till the autumn of 1873. Her reappearance in New York took place at Augustin Daly's Broadway Theatre, his Fifth-avenue Theatre, in Twenty-fourth-street, having been burnt down, and the new one, now known as "The Globe," in twenty-eight-street, not being finished. Here in September, 1873, Miss Minnie Walton acted Violet in About Town, and afterward in Fritz, with Mr J.K. Emmet. On November 10th her services were transferred to the Grand Opera House, then under Mr Daly's management, her opening part being Rose in A Flash of Lightning. Joining Mr [Edward A.] Sothern in a professional tour through the States, she accompanied that actor on his return to England, and made her first appearance in England at the Haymarket, October 10th, 1874, as Mary Meredith in Our American Cousin. At the conclusion of her London engagement Miss Minnie Walton accompanied Mr Lyton Sothern to Australia, and, after performing in the Colonies for some time, returned to San Francisco, where her husband became the business Manager of Baldwin's Theatre. Though not an actress of the highest position, her face and figure always gave a charm to her stage assumption, and the death at an early age of one so fair to look upon will naturally create a feeling of deep regret among all who recognised in Minnie Walton their ideal of feminine loveliness.".