Sale 2665 - Lot 303
Unsold
Estimate: $ 500 - $ 700
Tissot, Samuel Auguste David (1728-1797)
Three Essays: First on the Disorders of People of Fashion. Second, on Diseases Incidental to Literary and Sedentary Person, Third, on Onanism: or a Treatise upon the Disorders produced by Masturbation.
Dublin: James Williams, 1772.
First collected edition, each essay previously published separately, octavo, half-title present, with divisional titles for the second and third essays; bound in full contemporary English sheepskin, both boards detached; ex libris William Turton with his engraved armorial bookplate inside front board, hole torn in the inner margin of the first three leaves; half-title reinforced along inner gutter; textblock broken in half, in need of binding repair; 7 7/8 x 4 3/4 in.
ESTC T76342.
[Together with] Tuke, Samuel (1784-1857)
Description of the Retreat, an Institution near York, for Insane Persons of the Society of Friends. Containing an Account of its Origin and Progress, the Modes of Treatment, and a Statement of Cases.
York: Printed for W. Alexander, et alia, 1813.
First edition, large paper quarto copy, illustrated with engraved frontispiece of the facade of the Retreat, and two plates showing floorplans; leaves untrimmed, waterstain to corner of frontispiece, title browned; bound in the original boards (bumped, spine damaged with loss); ex libris Sion College Library, with library and de-accession stamps on verso of title; 11 1/8 x 8 3/4 in.
Tuke was a third-generation mental health reformer whose grandfather and father both had a hand in establishing the York Retreat in the late 18th century. The Quaker community objected to the treatment of people held in "insane asylums" in this period, and advocated a moral treatment instead. The Retreat is still in operation as an outpatient facility serving various psychological needs of the community.
Garrison-Morton 4925.1; Hunter & MacAlpine, pages 684-90; Norman 2210.
From Dr. Michael Stone's Psychiatry Collection.
Three Essays: First on the Disorders of People of Fashion. Second, on Diseases Incidental to Literary and Sedentary Person, Third, on Onanism: or a Treatise upon the Disorders produced by Masturbation.
Dublin: James Williams, 1772.
First collected edition, each essay previously published separately, octavo, half-title present, with divisional titles for the second and third essays; bound in full contemporary English sheepskin, both boards detached; ex libris William Turton with his engraved armorial bookplate inside front board, hole torn in the inner margin of the first three leaves; half-title reinforced along inner gutter; textblock broken in half, in need of binding repair; 7 7/8 x 4 3/4 in.
ESTC T76342.
[Together with] Tuke, Samuel (1784-1857)
Description of the Retreat, an Institution near York, for Insane Persons of the Society of Friends. Containing an Account of its Origin and Progress, the Modes of Treatment, and a Statement of Cases.
York: Printed for W. Alexander, et alia, 1813.
First edition, large paper quarto copy, illustrated with engraved frontispiece of the facade of the Retreat, and two plates showing floorplans; leaves untrimmed, waterstain to corner of frontispiece, title browned; bound in the original boards (bumped, spine damaged with loss); ex libris Sion College Library, with library and de-accession stamps on verso of title; 11 1/8 x 8 3/4 in.
Tuke was a third-generation mental health reformer whose grandfather and father both had a hand in establishing the York Retreat in the late 18th century. The Quaker community objected to the treatment of people held in "insane asylums" in this period, and advocated a moral treatment instead. The Retreat is still in operation as an outpatient facility serving various psychological needs of the community.
Garrison-Morton 4925.1; Hunter & MacAlpine, pages 684-90; Norman 2210.
From Dr. Michael Stone's Psychiatry Collection.
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