RALPH RICHARDS: PROTO-SCROOGE
Ralph richards, the miser.
London.
Printed for Baldwin, Cradock and Joy...and N. Hailes, 1821.
First edition.
12mo.
[2], 159pp, [1]. With an engraved frontispiece. Original publisher's black roan-backed marbled paper boards, ruled and lettered in gilt. Rubbed. Light offsetting to title, very occasional spotting.
An unsophisticated copy of the first edition of children’s writer Jeffreys Taylor’s (1792-1853) conduct of life tale in which the eponymous proto-Scrooge, having happened across a concealed gold coin whilst walking one night, is driven to distraction by the possibility of yet more hidden wealth. The miser is further encouraged by the sudden appearance of a ghostly apparition who, in portentous tones, appears to confirm his suspicions that a great treasure is within reach. Richards, with some misadventure, soon locates a buried vault brimming with riches and, somewhat unusually for a children’s tale, is able to purloin each and every valuable item without consequence. The book concludes rather abruptly with the miser triumphant, though possessed of a nagging thought that his acquired wealth might better be secured underground.
OCLC records copies at just four locations in the British Isles (Aberdeen, BL, Glasgow, and Oxford), and a further eight in North America (California, Columbia, Florida, Morgan, Pennsylvania, Texas, Toronto, and Victoria). COPAC adds no further.
£ 375.00
Antiquates Ref: 25408
OCLC records copies at just four locations in the British Isles (Aberdeen, BL, Glasgow, and Oxford), and a further eight in North America (California, Columbia, Florida, Morgan, Pennsylvania, Texas, Toronto, and Victoria). COPAC adds no further.
