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BERKELEY ( George )

Currency:EUR Category:Antiques / Books & Manuscripts Start Price:10.00 EUR Estimated At:120.00 - 160.00 EUR
BERKELEY ( George )

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Auction Date:2012 Oct 20 @ 11:00 (UTC+1)
Location:38 Molesworth Street, Dublin, Dublin, ., Ireland
BERKELEY ( George ). A chain of philosophical reflexions and inquiries concerning the virtues of Tar Water, and divers other subjects connected together and arising one from another. The second edition, improved and corrected by the author. 1744a very good copy.The second London edition, with the first appearance of the contents leaf. The tag "the cup that cheers but not inebriates", made current by Cowper with reference to tea comes from 'Siris', where it refers to tar-water. The book passes, discursively but in beautiful writing, from tar-water through botany, iatrochemistry, and cosmology, to a survey of ancient philosophies and theosophies. The general principle is that under God 'there runs a chain [in Greek, seiris] throughout the whole system of beings'. While in America, Berkeley experimented with tar-water for many ailments, including dysentery, rheumatism and asthma. The treatment proved so successful that he set up an apparatus for manufacturing it.ALSO WITH THIS LOT: NARY ( Cornelius ). A letter to His Grace Edward Lord Bishop of Tuam. An answer to his charitable address. To all who are of the communion of the Church of Rome. Dublin : Printed in the year 1728. FIRST (ONLY) EDITON, pages 235, (1), 8vo, recent boards, with label : signs of use, the title-leaf repaired in margins : a good, sound copy. Nary (1658–1738), RC priest, religious controversialist, the most considerable Catholic figure in Ireland in the first half of the 18C. He enjoyed a degree of immunity which he fully exploited in dangerous times, while his outstanding honesty, integrity, and great learning earned him the esteem of many protestants as well as Catholics. He was essentially what was known in later times as a ‘Castle Catholic’ (that is, Dublin Castle). More than once he protested his loyalty to the crown and his admiration for the British constitution, although he fell short of abjuring the Pretender. This accounts for the considerable latitude he was allowed in his writings, in which he was often measuredly defiant, sometimes abusive, of church and state(ODNB).(2)ENGLISH PRE 1801; DUBLIN PRINTED; HISTORY; RELIGION; ; ; ; ; ; ; ;