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Examples

  • I am just packing them up with a few other books for my hermitage at Abbotsford, where my present parlour is only 12 feet square, and my book-press in Lilliputian proportion.

    A Publisher and His Friends Smiles, Samuel, 1812-1904 1911

  • It was not the number of his books, for he tells us how he was pained when a brother minister opened his book-press and smiled at its few shelves.

    Samuel Rutherford Whyte, Alexander 1894

  • In a small back closet, window opposite to door, and both always open, I had soon got a table wedged to fixity, had set on end my book-box, changing it to a book-press, and adjusted myself to work, quite tolerably all along, though feeling as if tied up in a rack.

    Letters and Memorials of Jane Welsh Carlyle 1883

  • The book-press was at that moment doing tremendous work among the classes with education and leisure.

    Critical Miscellanies (Vol. 2 of 3) Turgot John Morley 1880

  • It was not the number of his books, for he tells us how he was pained when a brother minister opened his book-press and smiled at its few shelves.

    Samuel Rutherford and some of his correspondents Alexander Whyte 1878

  • Pisistratus is a group of officers, and behind them again a book-press without doors, and a row of open books on the top.

    The Care of Books John Willis Clark 1871

  • I formerly thought that this book-press might represent those in use in

    The Care of Books John Willis Clark 1871

  • No example of an English book-press has survived, so far as I know, but it would be rash to say that none exists; nor have I been so fortunate as to find one in France, though I have taken a great deal of pains to obtain information on the subject.

    The Care of Books John Willis Clark 1871

  • No example of an English monastic book-press has survived, so far as I have been able to discover; but it would be rash to say that none exists.

    Libraries in the Medieval and Renaissance Periods The Rede Lecture Delivered June 13, 1894 John Willis Clark 1871

  • The same use obtained in medieval times [176], and the passage quoted above from the Augustinian customs [177] shews that the book-press there contemplated was a recess lined with wood and subdivided so as to keep the books separate.

    The Care of Books John Willis Clark 1871

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