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Has anyone ever encountered this book before?
It seems to be a very old book of tricks, including some billiard shots.
If the ebay listing can be taken at face-value, I think this book pre-dates Charles Cotton's The Complete Gamester, which (IIRC) was the first work containing rules of billiards and was published in the late 1600s.
Google's translation of the description is:
Ens, Caspar. Thaumaturgus mathematicus, id est, admirabilium effectorum e mathematicarum disciplinarum fontibus profluentium sylloge. Nunc denuo correctior & auctior. Cologne, Munich, 1651. 8°, approximately 15.5 x 10.5 cm. 4 sheets, 304 pp. (with the variant sheet 303-4), 8 sheets, with title woodcut and several woodcuts in the text Newer half-leather with colored paper covers.
- VD17 23:273399R (only has 1 sheet at the end). Rare second Latin edition (first published in 1636) of this curious work about mathematical games, tricks, salon magic, alchemy, etc. This copy includes both versions of the last text sheet, including the one with the bookseller's epilogue, in which the reader is informed that one... presented him here with an adaptation of a French work. These are the "Recréations mathématicques" by the Jesuit Jean Leurechon, which were also translated and adapted or imitated in other countries. The writer Caspar Ens (1570-1656) was apparently particularly interested in remote topics and translated several works from French, including "Guzman de Alfarache" into Latin.
- The woodcuts show various tricks, including a scene on a billiard table on page 146.
- Slightly browned due to the paper, a small trace of worms at the beginning with no loss of text, only the last few sheets a little worn and with damp edges, otherwise very clean. With the rare last leaf in both variants.