The Book-Hunter at Home, by P. 
B. M. Allan 
 
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Title: The Book-Hunter at Home 
Author: P. B. M. Allan 
Release Date: September 22, 2007 [EBook #22716] 
Language: English 
Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1 
*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE 
BOOK-HUNTER AT HOME *** 
 
Produced by Suzanne Lybarger, Brian Janes and the booksmiths at 
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THE BOOK-HUNTER AT HOME. 
Of this edition 500 copies have been printed, and 50 upon fine paper.
[Illustration: THE BOOK-HUNTER AT HOME (JAN SIX, BY 
REMBRANDT)] 
THE BOOK-HUNTER AT HOME 
BY P. B. M. ALLAN 
THE SECOND EDITION, REVISED 
[Illustration] 
LONDON PHILIP ALLAN & CO. QUALITY COURT, CHANCERY 
LANE 
First Edition--1920 
Second Edition--1922 
PRINTED BY WHITEHEAD BROTHERS, WOLVERHAMPTON. 
 
THE EPISTLE DEDICATORY 
TO THE HONOURABLE AND VERTUOUS LADY MISTRESS E. 
K. A. 
MADAM, 
It would be churlish indeed were I to send this book into the world 
without some acknowledgment of the share which you have had in its 
making. Indeed, I feel that you are chiefly responsible for it: without 
your encouragement, your active help, your patience with me at all 
times (at which I marvel constantly), it would never have arrived at 
completion. Truly it is your name, not mine, that should appear upon 
the title-page; for although mine may have been the hand that penned 
the words, certain it is that yours was the mind that guided my pen 
throughout. It is to your sympathy, your judgment, your excellent taste, 
that I am indebted for every good thing that I have penned; and where I
have put down aught that is trite or insipid, it is due to my own natural 
obstinacy in refusing, or carelessness in neglecting, to defer the matter 
to your better judgment. Thus it is only right that whatever praise may 
be bestowed upon this book should be accorded to you; my shoulders 
alone must bear the censure of the discerning reader. 
I am, Madam, your very dutiful, and loving husband, THE AUTHOR. 
 
PREFACE 
In placing this second edition before his fellow book-lovers, the author 
would like to take the opportunity of thanking the numerous 
correspondents who have written to him from all parts of the world. In 
truth book-collecting establishes a bond between its devotees that is 
effected by no other pursuit. 
The first edition was put forth only after much hesitation, and with a 
good deal of fear and trembling: that a second edition would ever be 
required was unthinkable. But since the book has so obviously been the 
means of bringing pleasure to so many, the author feels that it is his 
duty to bring this second edition 'up to date,' to make it as perfect as his 
poor skill allows. Accordingly the volume has been revised throughout, 
a number of additions have been made, both to the text and in the 
matter of footnotes, and the prices of books have been amended 
according to present conditions. Three illustrations have been added. 
QUALITY COURT, July, 1921. 
 
CONTENTS 
CHAP PAGE I. ADVENTURES AMONG BOOKS 1 II. THE 
LIBRARY 31 III. BOOKS WHICH FORM THE LIBRARY 58 IV. 
CHIVALRY AND ROMANCE 84 V. THE CARE OF BOOKS 106 VI. 
THE CARE OF BOOKS (Continued) 126 VII. BOOKS OF THE 
COLLECTOR 160 VIII. A PLEA FOR SPECIALISM 194 IX. A 
PLEA FOR SPECIALISM (Continued) 230 INDEX 267
ILLUSTRATIONS 
THE BOOK-HUNTER AT HOME frontispiece THE PERON page 96 
THE HALL OF THE KNIGHTS " 104 THE HOME-MADE 
LIBRARY " 128 
[Illustration] 
CHAPTER I 
ADVENTURES AMONG BOOKS 
'Thou shalt make castels thanne in Spayne.' 
CHAUCER. 
IT is a sad truth that bargains are met with more frequently in our youth 
than in our age. The sophist may argue that age begets philosophy, and 
that philosophy contemns all worldly things; yet certain it is that the 
book-hunter, one of the most philosophical of beings, remains on the 
look-out for bargains to the very end of his career. Nevertheless, it is a 
fact that in youth alone do we make those great bargains which lay the 
foundations of our careers as book-hunters. 
It is this sad truth which fosters in most of us the belief that we live in a 
decadent age, and that the days of our youth were infinitely more 
seemly than those which we now endure. But it is we who have 
changed: the bargains are still there, and may still be had at the cost of 
youthful energy and enthusiasm. 
'Ah, but you can't get the bargains nowadays    
    
		
	
	
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