Page:The Duties and Qualifications of a Librarian (1780).djvu/32

26 the merit of the tract, and was unwilling that so elegant a composition should be wholly condemned to forgetfulness: and in this he manifested both good taste and discernment. He therefore obtained the author's permission to print a few copies of it, solely for the use of those who were friendly to bibliographical studies. The number of these privileged amateurs was quite limited, and we are nearly certain that there are hardly more than twenty-five copies existing of this original edition of the Discours de l'Abbé Cotton des Houssayes. It makes a small octavo pamphlet of eight pages, printed with great care on