Here is a subject which I am sure can belong here, but which I have yet to see written about.
I have read many classics, mostly through their English renditions, since I first stumbled upon the Commentarii Caii Caesaris having dropped out of high school in the third (of six) years at about 15.
These were gathered from the internet and with time and patience printed, stapled, and made into little booklets.
I had the above mentioned Commentaries, Thoukydides, Xenophon's Symposion, Anabaseos, Hellenica, and all minor works, Plato's Symposion, Hesiodos' Works & Days, Homeros' Odysseia, Tacitus' Annals and Germanica, Aristoteles' On Dreams, Sleep, Sleeplessness, Breathing etc, and the Rhetorica, also a few of Aristophanes' works.
However, these little folders full of copy and paste jobs from the internet were not built to last, and some suffered with my extensive reanalysis of them.
After I began reading many of them again in their native language, and when I was starting to realise how many more works there were yet to encompass - I began to yearn for a beautiful, published edition of each - preferably with Latin or Greek on an opposite page to English or German, as I had once seen in a book.
So I looked online with the intention of spending money.
A month later, I had a growing collection of various editions of works from the wonderful Loeb Classical Library:
Plinius Maioris' Naturalis Historia in ten volumes.
Plinius Minoris' Epistulae in two volumes.
Apuleius' Asinus Aureus.
Columella's De Re Rustica et opera minora, De Arboribus in three volumes.
Epictetus' Discourses.
And the latest: Athenaeus' Deipnosophistae in seven (large!) volumes.
These are all completed by the collection of various editions from 1927-1980, all LCL, meaning each is beautifully bound with a full introduction and both Greek or Latin with English facing, footnotes, diagrams and well indexed.
Now I have also some treasures which should be arriving next week, these being bought in a later spree when I awoke one morning and decided I wanted a fine edition of the Commentarii, the first I ever read - as I had never had anything but an internet copy.
That led to the purchase of an early edition of all Caesar's works (even Fragmenta!) in worn external condition but strongly bound and well kept internally, which was reprinted in 1764. Now that may be a doddle for any of you Europeans, but Australian as I am, I have not handled a book older than a century.
The book includes three fold-out maps, is of course all Latin and was sold for 46 pounds, which is about $AU73.
Well I think it was a wonderful deal, but I'll know it when I receive it in the post!
I also purchased a full 3 volume edition of Pausanias' Descriptio Graeciae in the old Greek with Latin annotations printed 1829 - with - the first (and only available) volume of six representing the full works of Tacitus printed in 1760, which being the first volume only consists of the first six books of the Annals (Which I appreciate anyway!).
These two purchases together in good condition for $US200.
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Anyway, you can tell that I prize them highly, and if I haven't been duped I will be even more contented when I see them safe and sound here at home.
For my first venture into the world of antique books, I think I came out with some very good deals, and some valuable books also which I will be proud to study and care for.
Any of you please don't hesitate to tell me if I have made a mistake somewhere in paying too much!
The collection of LCL editions I have amount to about $AU750 to begin with, so I will have quite a little trove when the older ones arrive!
Now I didn't make a thread just to brag - I could have done that anywhere on the forums
Here is the interactive, actual point of this post! Right here!
I really want to see if there are any others here who have collected antique books, classical or not, historical or not (best if they are though!), if any have some of the Loeb Classical Library editions, if any of you I suppose have a soft spot for a certain well crafted old book in your library which you would care to share your appreciation of.
This thread has the potential to be off-topic in this forum if it isn't already, but I hoped it might be more suited to the audience here.
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