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ARAM ( Eugene ). The genuine account of the life and trial of Eugene Aram, for the murder of Daniel

Currency:EUR Category:Antiques / Books & Manuscripts Start Price:10.00 EUR Estimated At:100.00 - 150.00 EUR
ARAM ( Eugene ). The genuine account of the life and trial of Eugene Aram, for the murder of Daniel

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Auction Date:2012 Oct 20 @ 11:00 (UTC+01:00 : BST/CET)
Location:38 Molesworth Street, Dublin, Dublin, ., Ireland
ARAM ( Eugene ). The genuine account of the life and trial of Eugene Aram, for the murder of Daniel Clark ... who was convicted at York Assizes, August 3, 1759 ... After a short narration of the fact, is prefixed, an account of the remarkable discovery of the human skeleton at Thistle-Hill … With the apology, which he left in his cell, for the attempt he made on his own life ; and his plan for a lexicon, some pieces of poetry, &c. … To this edition is further added, the surprizing story of Jaques du Moulin. Dublin : Printed by Peter Hoey, 1793108-pages, 12mo, sewn as issued in original blue paper wrappers but these are no longer present : a little dusty at beginning and end but still a very good copy. A scarce edition : ESTC locates four copies (D, Dm : Yc and McBJ-P - not in L, C or O). Somewhat enlarged on the 81-pages of the previous Dublin edition of 1759. Aram's legacy has been very different from what he or any of his contemporaries would have imagined. As a linguist he recognized Celtic as part of the European family of languages and rejected the sequential origins of European languages in favour of a lateral relationship as descendants of a common mother tongue. His view of the prominence of Celtic as the mother tongue has been discredited by later developments in scholarship, however, and he has not been remembered in the mainstream history of philology. His greater significance is in the context of popular English literary history in the century following his execution. Evoking little public sympathy at the time of his death, he was afterwards elevated to heroism as a symbol of the human capacity for both good and evil. His shocking arrest was dramatized in Hood's familiar ballad ‘The Dream of Eugene Aram’ (1829), and his life romanticized to almost Byronic proportions in Edward Bulwer's best-selling eponymous novel of 1832(ODNB).ENGLISH PRE 1801; DUBLIN PRINTED; TRIALS; ENGLISH LITERATURE; ENGLAND; YORKSHIRE; ; ; ; ; ;