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Light brown calf, blind fillets, flat spine, orange morocco title piece (old binding).
1 in stock
Caillet no. 3124: ‘Alongside his main subject, the author recounts a host of extraordinary facts, the origins of numerous legends and sayings prevalent in rural areas, which often conceal a profound meaning that is now little known’ – Yves-Plessis, 1012 – not listed in Dorbon – Guaïta, 1314.
A rare first edition of this medical-alchemical treatise.
Delivered before a learned assembly in Montpellier in 1657, this discourse explains the principle of the ‘powder of sympathy’: healing a wound from a distance or by treating the object that caused it.
“Il faut avouer que c”est une chose merveilleuse, que la playe d’une personne blessée puisse estre guérie, ou son inflammation & douleur augmentée, par l’application d’un remède appliqué à un morceau de linge ou à une épée mesme en une grande distance” (pp. 21-22).
Kenelm Digby (1603–1655), a chemist and philosopher, explains that he purchased the secret of this preparation—based on powdered vitriol and gum—from an Italian monk. He attempts a semi-rational justification and, to explain its effects, invokes vital spirits, radiation, fermentation and odours.
Digby’s social standing—as a courtier close to the Stuarts and a diplomat travelling through the courts of Europe—undoubtedly enabled this “fantastical” treatise to achieve great success and be frequently reprinted.
Provenance: unidentified armorial bookplate, with library call number; Sir Irvine Masson (1887–1962), a chemist of Scottish origin born in Australia; he was Vice-Chancellor of the University of Sheffield from 1938 to 1953 (handwritten bookplate, 1926); Robert S. Pirie (1934–2015) (Sotheby’s 2–4 Dec. 2015, lot 246, which cites the following provenance: Sotheby’s, 21 April 1958, lot 10) (bookplate).
Spine lightened, slight wear to the cover. Tears without loss to the endpapers.





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