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DISMAL STORM. An account of the dismal storm which lately happen’d in England, on Saturday the twent

Currency:EUR Category:Antiques / Books & Manuscripts Start Price:10.00 EUR Estimated At:600.00 - 800.00 EUR
DISMAL STORM. An account of the dismal storm which lately happen’d in England, on Saturday the twent

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Auction Date:2012 Oct 20 @ 11:00 (UTC+1)
Location:38 Molesworth Street, Dublin, Dublin, ., Ireland
DISMAL STORM. An account of the dismal storm which lately happen’d in England, on Saturday the twenty-seventh of November last, 1703, which occasion’d great damages both by sea and land. ( Ccolophon : ) Dublin re-printed at the Post-Office Coffee-House in Fish-shamble-street. 1703Broadside, 300 x 200mm approximately, printed on both sides of the leaf, (2)-pages, folio, unbound, with fore and lower edges uncut : a fine copy. An unrecorded Dublin broadside. Fascinating reports from around England on the effects of the famous storm of 27 November 1703, when terrible damage was done by a hurricane that struck overnight. Particularly exposed were coastal towns, and the reports begin with one from Cowes on the Isle of Wight, where ‘several Ships in Harbour drove foul of each other, and some of them have receiv’d great Damage ; the Swallow Ketch from Lisbon, with Canary, drove out of the Road, as did one of the Transport Ships with Soldiers from Ireland, and ’tis not yet known what is become of them’. Similar reports come from other English coastal towns – Yarmouth (where the Bishop of Bath and Wells and his wife were killed in bed), Plymouth, Newcastle and Deal. However, there is some good news: ‘a Merchant Ship from Pensylvania, and 2 from Verginia are come in, and ... several others are in sight, under Convoy of the Guernsey’. Inland towns and woodland, especially in the south, also reported much damage : the cathedal close in Salisbury, fruit trees in Kent, and sheep in Gloucestershire all suffered. In London spires were blown down from churches and ‘Mr Simson a Scrivener near the Royal-Exchange, was kill’d by the fall of a stack of Chimnies’. Many were put in mind of the storm some 45 years before, at the death of the Protector : ‘Some who remember the so much talk’d of Wind at Oliver’s Death say, this far exceeded it’, and the violence of the wind inspired one of Defoe’s most memorable books, The Storm (published the following July). More than 4000 trees are supposed to have been lost in the New Forest, and 13 ships of the Royal Navy (along with 1500 seamen) were lost. This collection of reports from around England is said to be reprinted from, one assumes, a London original, but no broadside with a precisely similar title is known. The closest comparison is with 'A Letter from a Gentleman in London, to his friend in the country, containing an account of the dismal effects of the terrible storm of wind, or hurricane', which is dated ‘London, Novemb. 29. 1703’ at the head. That broadside is almost as rare as this one, with just two copies recorded, at the Guildhall Library and Chetham’s Manchester; Mr Michael Powell, Librarian of Chetham’s Library, kindly informs us that this London printing is not the same text as the present broadside – and it is in any case only half as long, being on one side of the leaf only.ENGLISH PRE 1801; DUBLIN PRINTED; BROADSIDE; METEOROLOGY; ; ; ; ; ; ; ;