Paulo Ronai:Dicionario frances-portugues, portugues-frances (French Edition)
- cópia assinada 1989, ISBN: 9788520901335
Lisbon, Na Officina de Francisco Borges de Sousa, 1765.. FIRST and ONLY EDITION. 4 works in 1 volume. 4°, contemporary mottled sheep (a few pinpoint wormholes on covers, slight wear, rec… mais…
Lisbon, Na Officina de Francisco Borges de Sousa, 1765.. FIRST and ONLY EDITION. 4 works in 1 volume. 4°, contemporary mottled sheep (a few pinpoint wormholes on covers, slight wear, recased with recent endleaves), spine gilt with raised bands in five compartments, crimson leather lettering piece in second compartment from head, gilt letter, text-block edges marbled. Woodcut vignette on title page. In good to very good condition. (3 ll.), 64 pp., (1 l.). *** FIRST and ONLY EDITION of this Arte poetica in verse. It is usually encountered bound with the three works which follow. That they belong together is demonstrated in the licenses and censura statements (including a Censura "Do Ordinario" by Diogo Barbosa Machado). The final leaf contains on its recto additional licenses, one of which is signed by a Craesbeck, and a few lines of errata; the verso is blank. There appear to be copies which contain an extra collective title page at the beginning, Obras em verso.Francisco de Pina e Mello (1695-1773), who rarely used the "de Sá" part of his name which appears on the title pages of the present four volumes, was born and died at Montemor-o-Velho. Coming from a family of the lower nobility, he studied at Coimbra but never took a degree, reading what interested him, being particularly influenced by the Baroque. A trip to France in 1753 put him in contact with pre-romantic French authors. He ran afoul of the Marquês de Pombal, was imprisoned, and spent his final years engrossed in literary theory. A member of the Real Academia de História, the Academia dos Aplicados, and the Academia dos Ocultos, he was something of a contradiction as a poet: bucolic and very much influenced by Gongorism, condemned by the árchadas (Correa Garção and Cruz e Silva considered him to be marginal, "o corvo do Mondego"), but finally defending Neoclassicism. In short, he is representative of the contradictions of the confused pre-romantic aesthetics of the period in a synthesis of Gongorism with French Neoclassicism. See Álvaro Manuel Machado in Dicionário de literatura portuguesa, p. 306; also Joaquim Correia in Biblos, III, 604-8.*** Innocêncio III, 35; on the author, see pp. 33-6. *** BOUND WITH: MELLO [or Melo], Francisco de Pina de Sá e de. Palacio do sol, ou panegyrico gratulatorio que ao muito alto, poderoso Rei da Gran-Bretanha, de Escocia, de Irlanda; &c. &c. &c. e a toda a Nação Britanica dedicou pelo magnifico soccorro, que derão a Lisboa na calamidade do Terremoto. Lisbon: Na. Offic. de Joam Antonio da Costa, 1765. 4º, 35 pp., (2 ll.). Woodcut vignette on title page. Ink stain of about 5 cm. to fore-edge, seeping ever so slightly, at most about .4 cm. into outer margin. A good copy.FIRST and ONLY EDITION of this poem praising King George I and the British people for their help after the Lisbon earthquake, with some exposition of the noble lineage of the House of Brunswick (House of Hanover), and even a mention (p. 8) of Copernicus and Tycho Brahe. The final two leaves contain a "Cathalogo das obras impressas do mesmo author, as quaes se acharão na loja de Antonio da Silva da Costa, mercador de Livros, na rua Augusta, na travessa de S. Nicolão."* Innocêncio III, 35.AND BOUND WITH:MELLO [or Melo], Francisco de Pina de Sá e de. Palacio do destino, ou epithalamio nas felicissimas nupcias do Ill.mo, e Ex.mo Senhor Henrique Joseph Maria Adam de Carvalho e Mello, e da Ill.ma e Ex.ma Senhora D. Maria Antonia de Menezes. Lisbon: Na. Offic. de Joam Antonio da Costa, 1765. 4º, (8 ll.), 34 pp., (1 l.). Ink stain of about .5 cm. to fore-edge, seeping ever so slightly, at most about .4 cm. into outer margin. A good copy.FIRST and ONLY EDITION. The poem is dedicated to Sebastião Joseph de Carvalho e Mello, Conde de Oeiras (later Marquês de Pombal), and includes a flowery six-page address to him beginning on the second leaf recto. The first two pages of the main text contain an "Argumento do epithalamio." The poem celebrates the marriage of Pombal's eldest son: an obvious attempt by the author to ingratiate himself with the powerful minister who had had him imprisoned in 1762. The final leaf contains a "Cathalogo de algumas obras deste autor, as quaes se achão de Antonio da Sylva da Costa mercador de livros na rua Augusta, na travessa de S. Nicolão." Several works which would have been offensive to Pombal, defending the educational program of the Jesuits against the proposed reforms of Verney, are described as "supprimida pelo author." Pina e Mello's Gruta das parcas, a poetical work favorable to the Duque de Aveiro, is not even mentioned.* Innocêncio III, 35 (without mention of the final leaf).AND BOUND WITH:MELLO [or Melo], Francisco de Pina de Sá e de, trans. Tradução do Oedipo de Sophocles . Lisbon: Na. Offic. de Joam Antonio da Costa, 1765. 4º, 140 pp. Woodcut vignette on title page. Ink stain of about .5 cm. to fore-edge, seeping ever so slightly, at most about .4 cm. into outer margin of the first 16 leaves. A good copy. First Edition in Portuguese of Sophocles' Oedipus at Colonus. Pina e Mello states in an "Advertencia" that he has substituted the high priest of Jupiter for the chorus in the original Greek because, in essence, it was more in accord with the Portuguese theater of the day.* Innocêncio III, 35. Gonçalves Rodrigues, A tradução em Portugal 1069 (giving incomplete transcription of title)., Lisbon, Na Officina de Francisco Borges de Sousa, 1765., Lisbon, Na Impressão Regia, 1809.. First and Only Edition. 4°, contemporary decorated wrappers (spine worn, a few small holes, minor fraying). Woodcut Portuguese royal arms on title page. In very good condition. 32 pp. *** FIRST and ONLY EDITION. The author claims to have been the instigator of plans to expel Junot and the French. He was one of Junot's victims, and railed against him in his Analyse das ordens do dia de Beresford, Lisbon 1820. Ferreira da Costa, who served under Beresford during the Peninsular War, was later accused of taking part in the conspiracy of Gomes Freire, but exonerated.*** Innocêncio VII, 417; XX, 3. Ayres Magalhães de Sepúlveda, Dicionário bibliográfico da Guerra Peninsular II, 30. Biblioteca Pública de Braga, Catálogo do Fundo Barca-Oliveira, p. 129. Porbase locates a single copy, in the Biblioteca Nacional de Portugal. Copac repeats British Library only. Not located in Hollis. Not located in Orbis. Not located in NUC., Lisbon, Na Impressão Regia, 1809., [Colophon] Lisbon, Na Typ. Patriotica de Carlos José da Silva e Comp.ª, 1836.. FIRST and ONLY EDITION. Large folio (39.4 x 25.2 cm.), unbound. Caption title. Folded once horizontally. Water and mud stained without impairing legibility. In somewhat less than good condition, but still serviceable. (2 ll.). Text on most of the first, all of the second, and most of the third page in three columns. *** FIRST and ONLY EDITION [?] of this apparently unrecorded program describing Castilho's mnemonic techniques. More than half of the second and third pages consist of extracts from newspapers describing Castilho's mnemonic activities. Most are in French, from the Propagateur of western Flanders, the Courrier de l'Escant of Tournay, the Eclaireur of Namur, the Messager of Gand, the Feuille of Saint-Omer, the Courrier du Nord of Valenciennes, and Le Vigilant de Seine et Oise of Versailles. There are also one each in English and Dutch, from the Times of London and Den Vaderlander, respectively. Beginning toward the end of the third page, and occupying a good part of the final one is an extensive list of newspapers that have reported on Castilho's lectures about memory. In addition to the Times, the Morning Herald (three issues), the Morning Post (two issues), and Gent's Magazine are listed for London. Two Parisian newspapers are listed, six from Brussels, one each from Geneva and Lausanne, and fifty-one more cities and towns from throughout France and Belgium are mentioned, a few being represented by more than one newspaper. The program declares that during the civil war in Portugal, the proceeds from Castilho's lectures were donated to the liberal cause of D. Maria II, in the struggle against her absolutist uncle D. Miguel.José Feliciano de Castilho de Barreto e Noronha (Lisbon, 1810-Rio de Janeiro, 1879) was the younger brother of the blind poet, literary critic and historian António Feliciano de Castilho, 1º Visconde de Castilho, as well as the journalist and author Alexandre Magno de Castilho, and uncle of the author Júlio de Castilho. Journalist, playwright, poet, literary critic and historian, political activist, physician and lawyer, he wrote three books on the subject of mnemonics, all in French, all published originally in 1831. He also held a doctorate in philosophy from the University of Rostock. After spending the years 1830 to early 1834 in exile, he returned to Lisbon, devoting himself to journalism, founding or co-founding and editing several newspapers. From 1839 to 1842 he took up a diplomatic post in Hamburg, where he published Traité du Consulat. In 1843 he became director of the Biblioteca Nacional, serving until 1847, and was president of a commission charged with reforming the Archivo Nacional da Torre do Tombo. He also served as a deputy to the Côrtes several times. After 1847 he spent most of his life in Brazil, where he practiced law while continuing to pursue his literary, theatrical and journalistic interests, returning a number of times to Portugal.*** Not located in Innocêncio; for José Feliciano de Castilho de Barreto e Noronha, see IV, 316-22; XII, 314-8, 414. See also Dicionário cronológico de autores portugueses, II, 63-5; Grande enciclopédia VI, 216-217. Not located in Porbase. Not located in Copac., [Colophon] Lisbon, Na Typ. Patriotica de Carlos José da Silva e Comp.ª, 1836., London, impresso por T.C. Hansard, 1814.. FIRST and ONLY EDITION. 8°, later quarter dark blue sheep over marbled boards, smooth spine with gilt fillets and letter (small scrape, slight wear). Some browning and foxing to title-page. Outer and lower edges uncut. Overall in very good condition. 138 pp. *** FIRST and ONLY EDITION. Lieutenant Colonel Pinheiro, in command of the fortress at São João Baptista da Foz (Porto), was accused of anarchism, fomenting revolution, and stealing from the royal treasury. On June 6, 1808, Pinheiro raised the flag of Portugal over the fortress (see document no. 43), which is credited as the first act of Portuguese rebellion against the French invaders. The volume is comprised of witness statements in Portuguese, English, and French.*** Ayres Magalhães de Sepúlveda, Dicionário bibliográfico da Guerra Peninsular III, 53. Biblioteca Pública de Braga, Catálogo do Fundo Barca-Oliveira, p. 192. Porbase locates a single copy, at the Biblioteca João Paulo II-Universidade Católica Portuguesa. Not located in Copac., London, impresso por T.C. Hansard, 1814., Lisbon, Na Typografia Lacerdina, 1808.. FIRST and ONLY EDITION. 8°, later plain lime green wrappers (faded). Typographical headpiece on p. 3. Some browning. Overall in good to very good condition. Oval tag with blue border with ink manuscript "20" at center on upper outer corner of front wrapper. "N. 7" in ink in upper outer corner of title page. 11 pp. *** FIRST and ONLY EDITION. The author excoriates the Spanish for not fighting on behalf of their rightful king.*** Ayres Magalhães de Sepúlveda, Dicionário bibliográfico da Guerra Peninsular II, 252. Biblioteca Pública de Braga, Catálogo do Fundo Barca-Oliveira, p. 169. Not located in Innocêncio. Porbase locates two copies, both at the Biblioteca Nacional de Portugal. Not located in CCPBE. Not located in Rebiun. Not located in Copac., Lisbon, Na Typografia Lacerdina, 1808., Porto, Livraria Chardron, 1905.. FIRST EDITION. 8°, original yellow printed wrappers (some soiling; head and foot of spine slightly defective; split of ca. 3 cm. between front cover and spine at head). Front cover and title page printed in red and black, with small publisher's vignette. Half title printed in red. Light browning. Uncut. In good to very good condition. Small oblong white paper label with serrated edges and blue border at foot of spine (shelfmark faded away). Frontispiece portrait, (2 ll.), 241 pp., (1 l.). *** FIRST EDITION in book form of essays that had originally appeared in the Gazeta de notícias of Rio de Janeiro; it was published posthumously and edited by Luís de Magalhães. The essays were written from Bristol and Paris between 1880 and 1893. Subjects include dueling, the Jesuits, Kaiser Wilhelm II, Victor Hugo, Siam, elections in France and Italy, the Franco-Russian alliance, Brazil, Spain, the question of the Caroline Islands, Morocco, Sophocles' Antigone, anarchism, King Umberto I of Italy's interview with Figaro, the Italian monarchy, and more.Guerra da Cal states that some copies have a plate with a photograph of the monument to Eça in Lisbon, while others contain a plate with a photograph of him taken by Guedes de Oliveira, of Porto. The present copy has a photograph of Eça late in life, upper body only, wearing a monocle, right arm resting on a cushion, left hand to face. A facsimile of his signature appears below, and there are some tiny letters at the left base of the cushion (possibly "P.Mar.º gr.").*** Guerra da Cal 1.198. The portrait is not in Soares & Lima, Dicionário de iconografia portuguesa; cf. 1045F for a similar one which appeared in O Occidente, 1903., Porto, Livraria Chardron, 1905., Editora Nova Fronteira, 1989-01-01. Unknown Binding. Good., Editora Nova Fronteira, 1989-01-01<