Almanacks and Calendars: Five Rare Books for Collectors

Bernard Quaritch

Rider’s British Merlin for 1660

Highlights from Bernard Quaritch's new catalogue Almanacks include:

Rider’s British Merlin for 1660

First edition, very rare, of one of the earliest issues of Rider’s British Merlin for 1660 (London, R. &. W. Leybourn, 1660), with its characteristic advice on husbandry and health, and predictions of the weather. ‘Cardanus Rider’ (here ‘Schardanus Riders’) is the anagrammatic pseudonym of the astrologer Richard Saunders (1613–1675). His British Merlin appeared annually from 1654. S eparate vellum pocket bound in at rear.

Ephemeris Absoluta

An annotated almanack from the reign of William and Mary London (J.D. for the Company of Stationers, 1693) with numerous contemporary annotations comprising accounts due 1690–1692. Daniel Woodward issued almanacks under the titles Vox Uraniae (1682–1688), and, after the Glorious Revolution, Ephemeris Absoluta (1689–1698). A six-line verse prognostication appears at the head of each month, and the additional content includes ‘Astronomical Observations’ as well as advertisements for Woodward’s cordial pills, family pills, elixir salutis, worming ointment, and pills ‘for the cure of Claps, French Pox’ etc.

Marshall’s Ladies Elegant Pocket Souvenir for 1830

A very rare and charming ladies’ almanack (London, [W.J. Ruffy for] W[illiam] Marshall, 1830) including plates illustrating the latest fashion and information on new music, songs, and dances. Included are new dances (amongst them ‘the Rudolph’, the ‘Hey Jenny come down to Jock’, the ‘Widow Mahoney’, the ‘Good Night, and Joy be with you All’, and the particularly complicated ‘Syra’), new songs, charades and enigmas (with answers to the previous year’s puzzles), and sheet music for The Favorite and The Ball Ticket

Pages from Ephemeris Absoluta
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Bernard Quaritch

Pages from Ephemeris Absoluta

Marshall’s Ladies Elegant Pocket Souvenir for 1830
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Bernard Quaritch

Marshall’s Ladies Elegant Pocket Souvenir for 1830

Forget me not; a Christmas and New Year’s, and Birth-Day Present
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Bernard Quaritch

Forget me not; a Christmas and New Year’s, and Birth-Day Present

The Garden Oracle and floricultural Year Book
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Bernard Quaritch

The Garden Oracle and floricultural Year Book 

Forget me not; a Christmas and New Year’s, and Birth-Day Present

The Anglo-German publisher Rudolph Ackermann’s literary annual Forget-me-not (London, [Thomas Davison for] R[udolph] Ackermann, 1831) was instrumental in introducing to English readers the concept of the German ‘gift book’. London-born journalist and writer Frederic Shoberl (1775–1853) was the editor of the Forget-me-not from 1822 until 1834. The Forget-me-not for 1831 includes tales about the Haudenosaunee (Iroquois) peoples of New York, an enslaved Black man, adventures in Italy, ghosts, and elves, as well as poems on cat’s paws, maniacs’ smiles, and puzzled painters.

The Garden Oracle and floricultural Year Book 

Edited by James Shirley Hibberd (1825–1890), one of the most successful Victorian gardening writers. The Year Book (London, Gardener’s Magazine Office, 1882) features a monthly calendar followed by lists of horticultural exhibitions, newly discovered fruits, vegetables, and plants, new inventions, planters’ tables, and ‘Potatoes for Exhibition and General Culture’. The various advertisements include flower and vegetable seeds for 1882, stoves, and anti-disease manure,

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