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BRAMHALL ( John ), Archbishop

Currency:EUR Category:Antiques / Books & Manuscripts Start Price:10.00 EUR Estimated At:120.00 - 160.00 EUR
BRAMHALL ( John ), Archbishop

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Auction Date:2012 Oct 20 @ 11:00 (UTC+1)
Location:38 Molesworth Street, Dublin, Dublin, ., Ireland
BRAMHALL ( John ), Archbishop.: - Berwick ( Edward ), ed. The Rawdon Papers, consisting of letters on various subjects, literary, political, and ecclesiastical, to and from Dr. John Bramhall, Primate of Ireland. Including the correspondence of several most eminent men during the greater part of the seventeenth century. Faithfully printed from the originals ; and illustrated with literary and historical notes … London : Printed by and for John Nichols and Son … sold also by R. Milliken, Dublin, 1819FIRST EDITION, with a plate of signatures and a folding table, pp vii, (1, blank), 430, with half-title, 8vo, contemporary half calf, gilt ruled spine, with label, gilt : very good-nice copy. Bramhall, 17C archbishop of Armagh. Haddan, editor of his works, was critical of his prose style, but T. S. Eliot was kinder : ‘his phrases are lucid and direct and occasionally have real beauty and rhythm’. Eliot also viewed him as a link between the Lancelot Andrewes generation and that of Jeremy Taylor, and praised him for taking up the cudgels against Hobbes. This has been the tenor of most assessments of his life, and he has been remembered chiefly by association with more famous figures such as Ussher, Laud, Hobbes, and Wentworth. Berwick’s patron, when marquess of Hastings, commissioned him to edit a number of letters to and from Bramhall which had come into the possession of the marquess through the Rawdon family. According to George Moore, Berwick ‘wrote the best English prose that ever came out of Ireland’ and Moore appears to have modelled the style of production of his works on Berwick's Apollonius (ODNB).ALSO WITH THIS LOT: (1) GILES ( John A. ), ed. The British History of Geoffrey of Monmouth. In twelve books. Translated from the Latin, by A. Thompson. A new edition, revised and corrected. By J. A. Giles. James Bohn, 1842. With a frontispiece, pages xxvii, 282, recent boards, uncut : a very good copy.Complete in itself : part of Giles's The Monkish Historians of Great Briitain. (2) GREY (Henry George Grey ), 3rd Earl. Parliamentary government considered with reference to a reform of parliament. An Essay. Richard Bentley, 1858. FIRST EDITION, pp xii, 219, (1), 8vo, original brown cloth : a very good to nice copy.Grey warned of the dangers of ill-considered tinkering with the electoral system that would set Britain on the slide to unbridled democracy. He urged that in order to avoid partisan manoeuvring and piecemeal changes any legislation must be preceded by careful investigation and all-party agreement for a comprehensive, lasting settlement. As a reform bill made its tortuous, capricious course through parliament Grey actively plotted with a group of dissentients, the Adullamites, to reshape its provisions ; but the campaign failed - a dispiriting blow for an aristocratic whig, plagued by infirmities and enveloping deafness, who predicted the fatal ‘Americanization’ of British politics (DNB). (3) [HONE ( Wm. )]. Another article for the Quarterly Review. Second edition. Printed for William Hone, 1824. 32-pages, 8vo, recent paper wrapper : a very good copy.A reply to an attack in the 'Quarterly Review' on his 'Aspersions Answered' : five editions were published. (4) HONE ( Wm. ) : -. The Real or Constitutional House that Jack built. Eleventh edition. Printed for J. Asperne and W. Sams, 1820. With 12 illustrations after Cruikshank, (24)-pages, 8vo, unbound, sewn as issued and uncut : a very good to nice copy. (5) ALLEN ( John ). Inquiry into the rise and growth of the Royal Prerogative in England. A new edition, with the author's latest corrections, biographical notices, &c. To which is added an inquiry into the life and character of King Eadwig. Longman, Brown, Green, and Longmans, 1849. LAST AND BEST EDITION, pages xciv, (2), 268, 8vo, original cloth : with some very slight wear at the headbands, but still a very good copy.His best-known work, here with biographical notices by Sir James Gibson Craig and Major-General Fox, together with some of his Edinburgh Review articles. "It represented an attack on radical views about parliament and a ‘Norman yoke’, but also an emphasis on the limitations to the monarchy. (6) WRIGHTSON ( Thomas ). On the Punishment of Death. Second edition. 1833. With a folding table, 44-pages, 8vo, recent paper wrapper : a nice copy.Advocating abolition and quoting statistics. A third edition followed in 1837.(7)IRELAND; RELIGION; HISTORY; ENGLAND; CONSTITUTIONAL LAW; PARLIAMENTARY REFORM; PARLIAMENTARY FRANCHISE; SATIRE; CRUIKSHANK; LAW; ROYAL PREROGATIVE; CRIME