Advice to the Officers of the British Navy.
£2,250 · Offered by Maggs Bros Ltd
An excellent example of later eighteenth-century satire, this work is so satisfying one can’t help but imagine an accompanying set of images by caricaturist Thomas Rowlandson . Our anonymous author gives the game away on the title-page with two quotes from Horace: “Ridiculum acri fortius et melius” [ridiculously sharp, stronger and better] and “Ridentem dicere verum quid vetat” [what forbids me from telling the truth with a smile?] Arranged in descending rank - starting with Admiral and ending with Cook - among others it includes the Officer of Marines, the Surgeon, Chaplain, Gunner and Carpenter. All of whom are given choice pieces of wisdom, reflecting the issues of the day. Commencing with a pressing issue on naval vessels, surgeons are advised that when “any libertine of the ship’s company, comes to you with a certain fashionable complaint give him directly a restringent injection of white vitriol, and he will be apparently cured in a few days, and with very little trouble to you. His disorder will probably make its appearance again in two of three months, which you can always attribute to his own imprudence … Above all, strive to cultivate a friendship with the purser and captain’s clerk, who will assist you in charging fifteen shillings for a venereal cure …” There are further notes on alcoholism and protecting the medicine chest from thieves. Captains are instructed that “In the West-Indies, if any negro slaves from the enemy’s plantations, escape on board your ship, l
- Year: 1785
Found via Rare Books Intel, a search across rare-book dealers, auction houses and marketplaces worldwide.