AESOP

Fabulas de la vida del sabio y clarísimo fabulador Isopo.  Madrid, widow of Barco Lopez, 1818

SPANISH AESOP, FROM THE LIBRARY OF A 'FORGOTTEN HISPANIST'

Title with woodcut vignette of Aesop at his writing desk, fifty woodcuts (c.50 x 35mm) in text illustrating Fables and Life.

8vo (154 x 105mm). 24, 352pp. Contemporary Spanish mottled calf, spine gilt in compartments with red morocco label, title lettered in gilt, red edges, marbled endpapers (minor wear and rubbing to extremities).

Madrid: la viuda di Barco Lopez, 1818.

£750.00

A handsome, later pocket edition of the Fables of Aesop, illustrated throughout with appealingly naive woodcuts; from the collection of ‘forgotten Hispanist’ Frederick Cosens (1819-1889), whose significant collections of Spanish books, manuscripts and fine art were sold in sales at Christie’s and Sotheby’s after his death; those at Sotheby’s ran 11-24 November, 1890.

Following Aesop’s Life and fables are those by other writers: Remigius, Avianus and Alonso de Pogio. This collection, first printed - that we can see - unillustrated in 1657, ran to many editions from multiple printers well into the nineteenth century. Comparison with other C19th editions indicates that they were illustrated with remarkably similar woodcuts, though slight variations of style, composition and crudeness indicate the use of different sets of blocks.

Provenance: 1. Early nineteenth-century booksellers’ label of Hortal y Compania, booksellers, Cadiz to front pastedown. Inked inscription facing dated 1821 suggests it was bought there. 2. Inscription of William Goulstone (possibly 1796-1873), Bristol, 1858. 3. Armorial bookplate to front pastedown of Frederick William Cosens (1819-1889) with motto ‘Sub Robore Virtus’. Cosens “began his working life aged 17 when he joined the sherry firm of Pinto Pérez in London as an invoice clerk. It was the start of a highly successful business career [which] allowed him to build up substantial collections of fine art, printed books and manuscripts. At his death, these were auctioned at five sales at Christie’s and Sotheby’s.” An avid Hispanist and collector of Dickens, his collection included Spanish chapbooks, which are now at Cambridge University Library.

OCLC: Harvard. The Met in New York also lists one in their collection.

Ref: G. West, ‘Frederick Cosens, a forgotten Hispanist’, BL European Studies blog [open access].

Stock No.
256807