Nature and Human Nature by Thomas Chandler Haliburtonk – Hurst & Blackett Standard Library Edition c.1880s
Bibliographic Details
- Title: Nature and Human Nature
- Author: By the Author of Sam Slick, The Clockmaker (Thomas Chandler Haliburton)
- Publisher: Hurst & Blackett, London (Printed by John Childs and Son, Printers)
- Series: Hurst & Blackett’s Standard Library
- Date: Undated, c. 1880s (first published 1855)
- Format: Hardback, green cloth boards
- Size: 19.8 × 13 × 2.8 cm
- Pagination: vi + 344 pages + 4-page publisher’s catalogue at rear, 2-page catalogue at start
- Weight: 482g
Exterior Condition
Bound in green cloth boards with blind-stamped decorations to front and rear, and gilt decorations and titles to the spine. Covers remain intact and robust for their age, with some rubbing at edges and corners and a few small marks. Cloth is still vibrant. The spine is strong with bright gilt.
Interior Condition
- Illustrated frontispiece with protective tissue guard
- Pages lightly tanned, with coloured pastedowns and endpapers
- Roughly cut edges with some uncut pages, consistent with period binding
- Very small amount of pen marginalia on p.344 and in publisher’s catalogue at rear. No further writing inside
- Light foxing to preliminary pages, but text remains clear
- Pages neat overall, with only the occasional small crease or mark
- Very small pinprick-size holes affecting margins of pp. 173/174 (does not affect text)
- Very small tear to bottom inner margin of front free endpaper and occasional small rips on page edges, mainly from being roughly cut (does not affect text)
- All pages securely bound, with a very light crack at page vi
Why this Book is Special
This edition of Nature and Human Nature comes from Hurst & Blackett’s Standard Library series, an important Victorian series that made literary works available to a wide audience. Thomas Chandler Haliburton, writing as “Sam Slick,” was a Canadian humourist whose satirical observations on society were extremely popular in both Britain and North America.
To collectors, this book offers not only the author’s wit but also a fine example of a late-Victorian publisher’s cloth binding. The gilt-stamped spine and robust green boards reflect the craftsmanship of the period.
Condition Summary
A well-preserved example of an antiquarian Standard Library edition. Clean, neat text with only light signs of use. Binding strong. Attractive Victorian cloth binding with gilt.