LONDON.- One of the earliest works on English viticulture comes for sale at
Chiswick Auctions this month. The specialist Books and Works on Paper sale on May 14 includes one of the few surviving copies of The English Vineyard Vindicated
, by John Evelyn and John Rose. Published in 1666, it is thought that most copies perished in the Great Fire of London. This rare survivor has an ink correction that is made in Evelyns own hand.
Among the many subjects John Evelyn (1620-1706) wrote about, horticulture became an increasing obsession. He published several translations of French gardening books, and his Sylva, or A Discourse of Forest Trees (1664) was highly influential in its plea to landowners to plant trees, of which he believed the country to be dangerously short.
Evelyns book on viticulture with the input of Gardner to his Majesty at St James, the aptly-named John Rose - offers advice on growing vines in the English climate at a time when England was a major consumer of wine but a very minor grower and producer. It includes a double-page engraved plate of the ordering and binding of vines. This particular copy includes an ink correction in the authors own hand changing the word strong on the third line of page 5 to stony. The same amendment is made to the copy held at Cambridge University Library.
Published for John Crook at the Ship in St. Paul's Church-Yard, The English Vineyard Vindicated was printed some time before September 2-6, 1666 when an inferno destroyed much of medieval London including the Old St Pauls Cathedral.
Chiswick Auctions estimate is £3000-4000.