EXTRACTS FROM

FIELD & TUER’S BOOK LIST,

The Leadenhall Press,
50, LEADENHALL STREET, LONDON, E.C.


☞ All these books are on sale at The Old London Street,
728, Broadway, New York.


MR. F. G. HILTON PRICE, F.S.A.

The Signs of Old Lombard Street. By F. G. Hilton Price, F.S.A., with Sixty full-page 4to Illustrations by James West. LONDON: Field & Tuer, The Leadenhall Press, E.C.

[One Guinea.


MR. NORMAN PRESCOTT DAVIES.

Gray’s Elegy: with Sixteen beautiful Illustrations by Norman Prescott Davies, facsimiled from his original drawings in the possession, and published by the gracious permission, of H.R.H. The Princess of Wales. Bound in gold lettered vellum, with broad silken bands and strings. LONDON: Field & Tuer, The Leadenhall Press, E.C.

[One Guinea.

“A work of very great beauty.”—Leeds Mercury.


MR. ANDREW W. TUER.

(Dedicated by gracious permission to Her Majesty the Queen.)

Bartolozzi and his Works. (New Edition.) Biographical, Anecdotal, and Descriptive. By Andrew W. Tuer. LONDON: Field & Tuer, The Leadenhall Press, E.C.

[Twelve-and-Sixpence.

A guide to the study of old-fashioned prints of the Bartolozzi school. Revised with new and interesting matter: in one thick handsome vellum-bound volume, gold lettered, broad silken bands and strings. Limited to 500 signed and numbered copies.

Views of English Society. By a little Girl of Eleven. Illustrated. LONDON: Field & Tuer, The Leadenhall Press, E. C. [Two-and-Eightpence.

“We have read through the ‘Views’ with intense amusement and satisfaction.”—Tablet.


MISS ALICE CORKRAN.

The Bairns’ Annual: for 1886-7. Edited by Alice Corkran. Illustrated with marginal sketches of child life by Lizzie Lawson. LONDON: Field & Tuer, The Leadenhall Press, E.C.

[Sixteen-Pence.


SAMUEL RICHARDSON.

Sir Charles Grandison. By Samuel Richardson. With Six Illustrations from the original copper-plates engraved in 1778 by Isaac Taylor; and a Preface by John Oldcastle. LONDON: Field & Tuer, The Leadenhall Press, E.C.

[Sixteen-Pence.

THE beautiful illustrations have been carefully and separately struck off direct from the original copper-plates themselves—the only method of printing by which the minuteness and beauty of the engraved work can be properly rendered.

“A marvellously cheap series illustrated with charming survivals of the age of copperplate printing.”—Saturday Review.


SOLOMON GESSNER.

Solomon Gessner, “The Swiss Theocritus.” With Six Illustrations and Extra Portrait from the Original Copper-plates engraved in 1802 by Robert Cromek, from Drawings by Thomas Stothard, R.A., and a Preface by John Oldcastle. LONDON: Field & Tuer, The Leadenhall Press, E.C.

[Sixteen-Pence.

THE beautiful illustrations have been carefully and separately struck off direct from the original copper-plates themselves—the only method of printing by which the minuteness and beauty of the engraved work can be properly rendered.

“The choice engravings from the original plates will have a charm of thousands.”—St. James’s Gazette.


MR. ANDREW W. TUER.

(Dedicated by gracious permission to Her Majesty the Queen.)

The Follies and Fashions of Our Grand-Fathers (1807). Embellished with Thirty-seven whole-page Plates, including Ladies’ and Gentlemen’s Dress (hand-coloured and heightened with gold and silver), Sporting and Coaching Scenes (hand-coloured), Fanciful Prints, Portraits of Celebrities, etc. (many from original copper-plates). By Andrew W. Tuer, author of “Bartolozzi and his Works,’ etc. LONDON: Field & Tuer, The Leadenhall Press, E.C.

Large paper copies, crown 4to, with earliest impressions of the plates; 250 only, signed and numbered, at Three Guineas.

Demy 8vo copies at Twenty-five Shillings.

QUAINT, amusing, dependable, and distinctly covetable. The binding more than suggests buckskin breeches and needlework samplers: in fact, they are there. The extra illustrations include many quaint prints of the period printed direct from the original copper-plates.

“May at any time be confidently dipped into by readers in search of quiet diversion.”—Graphic.


1,000 Quaint Cuts from Books of Other Days, including Amusing Illustrations from Children’s Story Books, Fables, Chap-books, etc., etc.; a Selection of Pictorial Initial Letters and Curious Designs and Ornaments, from Original Wooden Blocks belonging to The Leadenhall Press. LONDON: Field & Tuer, The Leadenhall Press, E.C.

[Sixteen-Pence.

A limited number printed on one side of the paper only at Two-and-Eightpence.

“A wonderful collection of entertaining old wood engravings ... any one of these delights is worth the one-and-fourpence.”—Saturday Review.


MR. A. R. COLQUHOUN.

Amongst the Shans: By A. R. Colquhoun, F.R.G.S., etc., Author of “Across Chrysê,” “The Truth about Tonquin,” “The Opening of China,” “Burma and the Burmans,” &c. With upwards of Fifty Illustrations, and an Historical Sketch of the Shans by Holt S. Hallett, preceded by an Introduction on the “Cradle of the Shan Race,” by Terrien de Lacouperie. LONDON: Field & Tuer, The Leadenhall Press, E.C.

[Twenty-one Shillings.

“Should be read by every English merchant on the look-out for new markets.”—Globe.


MR. JOSEPH CRAWHALL.

Izaak Walton: his Wallet Book, being the Songs in “The Compleat Angler” newly set forth and Illustrated by Joseph Crawhall. Hand-made paper; vellum bound, with inside humorously lettered silk-sewn pockets. Edition de luxe, limited and numbered. The numerous illustrations all separately hand-coloured. LONDON: Field & Tuer, The Leadenhall Press, E.C.

[One Guinea (500 Copies only); Large Paper, Two Guineas (100 copies only).

ONE of Mr. Crawhall’s engraved blocks—that is, the boxwood block itself—is attached as a pendant to a silk bookmarker to each copy of the large paper edition only.


MRS. ALFRED W. HUNT.

Our Grandmothers’ Gowns. By Mrs. Alfred W. Hunt. With Twenty-four Hand-coloured Illustrations, drawn by G. R. Halkett. LONDON: Field & Tuer, The Leadenhall Press, E.C.

[Seven-and-Sixpence.

MRS. HUNT gives a short history of the dress of the period, in which she carefully preserves the original descriptions of the plates as given in contemporary fashion-books.


☞ All these books are on sale at The Old London Street, 728, Broadway, New York.

FOOTNOTES:

[1] On the bough.

[2] Candlewick.

[3] Rushes green.

[4] Mr. J. E. Gardner’s collection of prints and drawings illustrating London, and numbering considerably over 120,000, contains many fine prints illustrating Old London Cries, including numerous examples of the alterations here indicated.

[5] “The Cries of London:” Copied from rare engravings or drawn from the life by John Thomas Smith, late Keeper of the Prints in the British Museum, 1839. On inquiring at the Print Department of the British Museum for a copy of this work, the attendant knew nothing of it, and was quite sure the department had no such book. It turned up on a little pressure, however, but the leaves were uncut.—Les morts vont vite!

[6] See Appendix.

[7] See page 125.

[8] “The best wigs are those made in Great Britain; they beat the French and German ones all to sticks.” The Book of Aphorisms, by a modern Pythagorean, 1834.

[9] Francis Grose tells us, in 1796, that some trades have from time immemorial invoked musical assistance,—such as those of pie, post, and dust men, who ring a bell.

My bell I keep ringing
And walk about merrily singing
My muffins.

[10] “Degeneration amongst Londoners.” By James Cantlie, M.A., M.B., F.R.C.S. One Shilling. The Leadenhall Press, E.C.

[11] Hammersmith.

[12] See p. 29.