428 HENRY SOTHERAN & CO., 140, STRAND, W.C, AND 43, PICOajUILLY, W. 



A FINE COPY OF THE EXCESSIVELY RARE ORIGINAL EDITION: 



»399 GliiBERT (William, m.d., Physicmnto Queen Elizabeth) : Gvilielmi Gilberti Colcestrensis, 

 Medici Londinensis, de Magnete, Magneticisque Corporibus, et de Magno Magnete 

 Tellure ; Pliysiologia noua, plurimis et Argumentis, et ExPERiMENTis demonstrata, editio 

 princeps ; with vignette on obverse and arms on rev. of title^ folding diagram, and numerous large 

 woodcuts, folio, FINE COPY m contemporary limp vellum, with marginal notes in French in a neat 

 old hand, £22. \0s Londini, excudebat Petrus Short, 1600 



An exceptionally tall copy, measuring llf x 7f inches. 



g400 Another Copy, with the folding diagram, folio, old calf, roughly rebacked {title and I. 7 



of Index in lithographic fs., but a SOUND, CLEAN, and TALL COPY, measuring U^^ x 7i inches)^ 



£10. 105 



First Edition of this monumental work, which gives England the glory of being the absolute birthplace of electrical 

 science, and is ' one of the finest examples of inductive philosophy that has ever been presented to the world' (Lord 

 Kelvin]. It was the first great work on natural science ever published in England, and here and abroad at once exerted an 

 enormous influence on the development of the newly-created science. It was so celebrated a hundred years after as to 

 call forth Dryden's well-known lines ' Gilbert shall live till loadstones cease to draw, 



Or British fleets the boundless ocean awe '. 



The first edition is of well-known rarity. Professor Silvanus Thompson, f.r.s., writing on the work in the ' Electrician ' 

 of March 24, 1906, says, ' This book is much rarer than tlie first folio Shakespeare, for while of that work no fewer than 156 

 copies are krwton to exist, there are only 68 copies of the first folio Gilbert knovm, and only two have been sold in the book-auctions 

 during the last twenty years.' 



8401 On the Loadstone and Magnetic Bodies, and on the Great Magnet the Earth: a 



New Physiology, demonstrated by many Arguments and Experiments : a Translation [with Life 

 (pp. 19)] by P. Fleury Mottelay, with portrait, 4 fs. title-pages, and numerous woodcuts 

 reduced from those of the first edition, roy. 8vo. cl., uncut, t. e. g- (scarce), £1. 15* 



London, or. New York, 1893 

 The first English Translation. It contains fs. reproductions of the woodcuts in the first edition, and fs. title-pages 

 of the first three editions, and Gilbert's * De Mundo Nostro Sublunari Philosophia Nova' (1651). 



8402 On the Magnet, Magnetick Bodies also, and on the Great Magnet the Earth ; a 



new Physiology, demonstrated by many arguments and experiments [translated from the First 

 Edition, by Silvanus P. Thompson, Sir Joseph L armor, Raphael Meldola, Latimer Clark, 

 Sir Benjamin Ward Richardson, ff.r.s., and others, with Index], with all the numerous wood- 

 cuts in exact fs. from, those of the first Edition : Notes on the De Magnete of Dr. William Gil- 

 bert [edited by Silvanus P. Thompson, f.r.s.] , with engravings—^ vols. sm. folio in 1, finely 

 printed on handmade paper at the Chiswick Press ; limp white vellum, with silken tiers (scarce), 

 £4. 4s Gilbert Club, 1900-1 



' This version has been prepared from the famous and rare original folio Latin edition of 1600, and is, as far as circum- 

 stances would permit, a facsimile (in English) of that edition. The translation is a page for page version ; all the cuts and 

 the finest of the ornamental initials having been reproduced in fs. A short index has been added to the text . . . The 

 edition is limited to 250 copies.' 



The greatest achievement of the De Magnete was the establishment of the magnetic nature of the earth, wliich Gilbert 

 proved analogically by his terrella, a large loadstone cut into the shape of a sphere. 



In electrical nomenclature he created the terms electrica and non-electrica in discovering the fact that many other 

 substances besides amber and jet (then alone supposed to possess it) have an electric action. From the word electrica 

 Robert Boyle afterwards derived the term electricity as used at the present time. 



One of Gilbert's most noteworthy discoveries, among the many contained in his book, is that of the earliest electro- 

 scope ever devised — the needle one. 



' His work contains all the fundamental facts of the science, so fully examined indeed, that even at this day we have 

 very little to add to them.'— Dr. Whewell. 



Prof. Silvanus Thompson's ' Notes ' are not only an indispensable commentary, but a valuable contribution to the 

 early history of magnetism and electricity. 



With Gilbert, Newton, and Darwin England may be said to have opened the windows on the constitution of the 

 physical universe. 



8403 : Thompson (Silvanus Phillips, f.r.s.) Gilbert, of Colchester; an Elizabethan 



Magnetizer, with 5 illustrations from the 'de Magnete ', sq. l8mo. parchment covers, uncut (scarce) y 

 12s 6d Sette of Odd Volumes, 1891 



Only 249 copies were printed, each being signed by the author. 



8404 GILL (Sir David, F.R.S., late Cape Astronomer Royal) : Annals of the Cape Observatory, 

 from its beginning to 1909 (Vols. I-XII, as under), with plates, maps, and other illustrations, 

 6 vols. 4to. hf calf gilt {one in cl.), and 17 parts, sewn as issued, £6. 6s 1886— Edin., 1909 



Contents:— I. 1. Observations of Comets, 1880-94 : I. 2-4. Telegraphic Determinations of Longitude, and Occultations 

 of Stars by the Moon, 1835-80 : II. 1. Observations of the Great Comet, 1882 : II. 2. Reference Catalogue of Southern 

 Double Stars, by R. T. A. Innes : II. 3. Occultations of Stars by the Moon, 1881-95 : II. 4. Micrometrical Measurements 

 of Double Stars, by R. T. A. Innes : II. 5. Meridian Observations of the Sun, Mercury, and Venus, 1884-92 : II. 6. 

 Occultations of Stars by the Moon, 1896-1906 : III-V. Cape Photographic Durchmusterung, 3 v. : VI- VII. Solar Parallax 

 from Heliometer Observations of Minor Planets, 2 v. : VIII. 1. Heliometer Observations of Major Planets, 1897-1904: 

 VIII. 2. Researches on Stellar Parallax with the Cape Heliometer: IX. Revision of the Cape Photographic Durch- 

 musterung : X. 2. Spectra of Silicon, Fluorine, and Oxygen, by J. Lunt : X. 3. Spectrographic Determination of the 

 Constant of Aberration, and of the Solar Parallax: XI. 1. Heliometer Triangulation of the Southern Circumpolar Area, 

 by S. S. Hough : XI. 2. Catalogue of 917 Circumpolar Stars, by S. S. Hough : XII. 2. Determination of the Mass of 

 Jupiter, and Orbits of the Satellites, by B. Cookson : XII. 3. Determination of the Inclinations and Nodes of the Orbits 

 of Jupiter's Satellites, by W. de Sitter : XII. 4. Determination of the Elements of the Orbits of Jupiter's Satellites, by 

 B. Cookson. 



8405 Vols. II. Parts IV-V ; VIII. Parts I-II ; X. Part III ; XI. Part I ; XII. 



Parts II-IV, 9 parts 4to. sewn as issued, 17s 6c? Edin., 1900-9 



8406 Catalogue of 4810 Stars for 1850 ; from Observations at the Royal Observatory, Cape 



of Good Hope, 1849-52, under the Direction of Sir Thomas Maclear, f.r.s., roy. 8vo. c^., 3s6c^ [1883] 



8407 Catalogue of 1905 Stars for 1865-0 from Observations at the Royal Observatory, Cape 



of Good Hope, 1861-70, under the Direction of Sir T. Maclear, f.r.s., roy. 8vo. cl., 2s 6d 1899 



8408 Catalogues of [4464] Stars for 19000, from Observations at the Royal Observatory, 



Cape of Good Hope, 1900-4, roy. 4to. cl., 2s 6rf Edin., 1906 



