Description:
University of North Texas Press, 2011. Paperback. Good. Pages can have notes/highlighting. Spine may show signs of wear. ~ ThriftBooks: Read More, Spend Less.Dust jacket quality is not guaranteed.
A Catalogue of Printed Books Written by William Prynne of Lincolnes-Inne, Esquire. Before, During, Since, his Imprisonment by (Prynne, William) Sparke, Michael - 1643
by (Prynne, William) Sparke, Michael
A Catalogue of Printed Books Written by William Prynne of Lincolnes-Inne, Esquire. Before, During, Since, his Imprisonment
by (Prynne, William) Sparke, Michael
- Used
- first
London: Michael Sparke, 1643. First edition. 4 pp. on bifolium. 1 vols. Folio (9 x 6-3/4 in.). Disbound, laid in black cloth folding case, with red leather label. Very pale dampstaining. First edition. 4 pp. on bifolium. 1 vols. Folio (9 x 6-3/4 in.). A rare catalogue by the printer Michael Sparke of the works of William Prynne (1600-1669), the puritan pamphleteer.
"Prynne was one of the most prolific and zealous of the Puritan pamphleteers of the seventeenth century, best known for his willingness to suffer torture and imprisonment for the right to express himself in print. For his criticism of the English stage in Histrio-Mastix (published by Sparke, 1633), a work interpreted as casting aspersions on the king and queen, Prynne was imprisoned, [pilloried] and shorn of his ears" - Ralph E. McCoy, Freedom of the Press: An Annotated Bibliography K-124.
Sparke states in his "The Stationer to the Reader" that he has published this catalogue "To free the Author from those Spurious Impostures which have been injuriously fathered on him by Walker the Ironmonger" and "To prevent all Imperfect Catalogues ... and to discover what Copies of his have been published by Erroneous Manuscripts ... " He lists 31 titles: 8 before his imprisonment, 14 written while in the Tower and 9 written since his release and return from exile. Among the best-known books published by Sparke are John Smith's The Generall Historie of Virginia, New England and the Summer Isles (first published 1624) and Francis Higginson's New-Englands Plantation (1630). Wing S-4815; ESTC R212514 (11 copies in the US); Rostenberg, Literary ... Publishing, Printing & Bookselling in England I, pp. 176-182
"Prynne was one of the most prolific and zealous of the Puritan pamphleteers of the seventeenth century, best known for his willingness to suffer torture and imprisonment for the right to express himself in print. For his criticism of the English stage in Histrio-Mastix (published by Sparke, 1633), a work interpreted as casting aspersions on the king and queen, Prynne was imprisoned, [pilloried] and shorn of his ears" - Ralph E. McCoy, Freedom of the Press: An Annotated Bibliography K-124.
Sparke states in his "The Stationer to the Reader" that he has published this catalogue "To free the Author from those Spurious Impostures which have been injuriously fathered on him by Walker the Ironmonger" and "To prevent all Imperfect Catalogues ... and to discover what Copies of his have been published by Erroneous Manuscripts ... " He lists 31 titles: 8 before his imprisonment, 14 written while in the Tower and 9 written since his release and return from exile. Among the best-known books published by Sparke are John Smith's The Generall Historie of Virginia, New England and the Summer Isles (first published 1624) and Francis Higginson's New-Englands Plantation (1630). Wing S-4815; ESTC R212514 (11 copies in the US); Rostenberg, Literary ... Publishing, Printing & Bookselling in England I, pp. 176-182
- Bookseller James Cummins Bookseller (US)
- Format/Binding 4 pp. on bifolium. 1 vols. Folio (9 x 6-3/4 in.)
- Book Condition Used - Disbound, laid in black cloth folding case, with red leather label. Very pale dampstaining
- Quantity Available 1
- Edition First edition
- Publisher Michael Sparke
- Place of Publication London
- Date Published 1643
- Keywords Bibliography