1816 UNIQUE HANDWRITTEN MANUSCRIPT ARCHIVE OF THREE (3) LETTERS OFFERING A GLIMPSE OF THE INNER WORKINGS OF THE FRENCH COURT AND A PERSISTENT RESOURCEFUL DOCTOR USING ALL HIS NETWORKING SKILLS

1816 UNIQUE HANDWRITTEN MANUSCRIPT ARCHIVE OF THREE (3) LETTERS OFFERING A GLIMPSE OF THE INNER WORKINGS OF THE FRENCH COURT AND A PERSISTENT RESOURCEFUL DOCTOR USING ALL HIS NETWORKING SKILLS

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VERY RARE GLIMPSE OF THE INNER WORKINGS OF THE FRENCH COURT AND A PERSISTENT RESOURCEFUL DOCTOR USING ALL HIS NETWORKING SKILLS. From the estate of the world renowned bibliophile and antiquary, Sir Thomas Phillipps. This document has not been on the open market for over 43 years, when purchased by an esteemed American collector, until now. (Further biographical notes on Sir Thomas are at the end of this item's listing.) THE ITEM: Three letters of varying sizes written by Dr. Naudin. Naudin writes on March 26th, 1816 to Madame La Duchesse explaining he would like to solicit an audience with the Vicomte for the purpose of requesting a raise. He feels entitled primarily because he is the leading doctor at the geriatric hospital and his father-in-law was a commissioner for the Vicomte.The second letter whose only date is April and I think safe to say 1816, is unaddressed but in detail says that he, Naudin, has received permission from La Duchesse to explain in great detail his needs and desires of a raise. He goes on to outline that he would take on greater duties...perhaps at the Hospital for Sick Children...for more compensation. The last letter, dated August 20th, 1816, is a beautifully written letter to the Board of Doctors wherein Naudin refers to the death of M. Mangenot and Naudin wishes to place his candidature to take his stead as the Director of the Hospital for Sick Children. This is really a remarkable set of documents. When studied together the nuances and the tone are really rather fascinating and certainly worthy of further study and research. Biographical Notes: SIR THOMAS PHILLIPPS (1792-1872). Born in 1792, Sir Thomas Phillipps from childhood was obsessed with the idea of obtaining virtually anything written or printed on paper, including cartloads of documents from wastepaper merchants and the entire inventories of booksellers. "I wish to have one copy of every book in the world," he declared to a friend. He very nearly succeeded. His collection ultimately grew to more than 100,000 books and at least 60,000 manuscripts. As a result of his extravagant purchases, Sir Thomas was permanently on the verge of bankruptcy and was constantly pursued by creditors. So many books arrived at his house that it was impossible to unpack his acquisitions much less keep pace with them. Visiting scholars, driven to distraction, would spend days hunting for an elusive text in the dusty heaps that filled every room. Because Sir Thomas has a morbid dread of fire, most of his collection was housed in coffinlike boxes that could be carted away quickly. Visitors to Middle Hill were struck too, by the presence of numerous logs, a ploy he used to lure beetles away from his books. As Sir Thomas relentlessly pursued his passion, the house itself began to crumble and its floors started to sag under the cast weight of hundreds of tons of paper. His neglect of Middle Hill was partly deliberate, however. Sir Thomas's chief enemy in life, James Halliwell, had married his daughter against his wishes. It appears that Halliwell was, in Sir Thomas' eyes, the worst kind of criminal, a book thief who had stolen valuable works from university libraries and even from his father-in-law. Having no sons, Sir Thomas was unable to prevent Halliwell from inheriting his estate. To ensure that his detested heir would never receive anything of value, Sir Thomas's solution was to allow Middle Hill to fall unto complete disrepair. He even went so far as to chop down and sell for lumber the centuries-old oak trees that lined the majestic mile-long drive to his home. In 1863 Sir Thomas decided to move - in order to accommodate his books. With the aid of 160 men, 103 wagonloads of books and papers drawn by 230 horses, the books were lumbered from Middle Hill top their new estate in nearby Cheltenham. It is said that for years afterwards the countryside was littered with the remains of carts that had collapsed under the sheer weight of the Phillipps collection. Sir Thomas continues to add to his library until his death in 1872. After Sir Thomas's death, his immediate family had no room for his collection. So vast was the library that although individual items and large sections were sold privately or through numerous auction sales, the Phillipps collection is still being sold more than a century after the death of its owner. In the course of its sales, many treasures have come to light. As late as 1964, part of the long-lost and unique medieval manuscript of the Roman poet Ovid's Metamorphoses appeared and was subsequently reunited with its other half at Magdalen College, Oxford. Once destined for destruction as worthless wastepaper, this and many other priceless works were saved by the single-minded obsession of the greatest bibliomaniac of all time.

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