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CALVERT ( Frederick ) : -

Currency:EUR Category:Antiques / Books & Manuscripts Start Price:10.00 EUR Estimated At:200.00 - 300.00 EUR
CALVERT ( Frederick ) : -

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Auction Date:2012 Oct 20 @ 11:00 (UTC+1)
Location:38 Molesworth Street, Dublin, Dublin, ., Ireland
CALVERT ( Frederick ) : -. The trial of Frederick Calvert, Esq ; Baron of Baltimore. In the Kingdom of Ireland, for a rape on the body of Sarah Woodcock ; and of Eliz. Griffinburg, and Ann Harvey, otherwise Darby, as accessaries before the fact, for procuring, aiding and abetting him in committing the said rape. At the assizes held at Kingston, for the county of Surrey, on Saturday, the 26th of March 1768, before the Hon. Sir Sydney Stafford Smythe, Knt, one of the Barons of his majesty's Court of Exchequer. Edinburgh : Printed for John Balfour [1768]Pages 92, 97 - 165, (1, blank), complete thus in spite of pagination jump, 8vo, neatly bound in recent half cloth over marbled boards : a very good copy. O'Higgins 3.66a. Calvert, sixth Lord Baltimore (1732-71). His father's title was Irish but Frederick was born in England. His life is noteworthy in part for scholarship, but more infamously for his libertinism. He was the author of Tour in the East in 1763 and 1764, which Lord Orford thought ‘no more deserved to be published than his bills on the road for the post-horses’. His debauched lifestyle was the subject of much critical comment, and in 1768 he was charged with raping Sarah Woodcock, a London milliner, at his country house at Epsom. Lurid details of the case were discussed in numerous pamphlets. With sufficient evidence to prove Woodcock's earlier complicity, he was acquitted, but left England after the trial. In 1769 he printed at Augsburg ten copies of Gaudia poetica Latina, Anglica, et Gallica lingua composita, praised by Linnaeus, to whom it was dedicated, as an ‘immortal work’. Caelestes et inferi, published in Venice, followed in 1771. Calvert was one of several noblemen vilified as examples of aristocratic vice in an age eager to celebrate the virtues of sentimental domesticity. He died at Naples without legitimate heir and the title became extinct. By his will he bequeathed the province of Maryland in America to Henry Harford, a child (ODNB).ALSO WITH THIS LOT: (1) SCOTT ( Sir Walter ) : -. Criminal Trials, illustrative of the tale entitled "The Heart of Mid-Lothian", published from the original record ; with a prefatory notice, including some particulars of the life of Captain John Porteous. Edinburgh : Printed for Archibald Constable and Company, 1818. FIRST EDITION,engraved frontispiece,pp(4),xxxvi,344,12mo,recent boards:very good. Todd 123A. The 36-page preface by Scott, who may also have edited the work.(2) ESPINASSE ( Isaac ). A digest of the law of actions at nisi prius. In two volumes. Dublin : Printed for H. Chamberlaine, E. Lynch (and thirteen others), 1794-93. Pages x, (34), 426 : (2), (427)-791, (67), 2 vols in 1, separate titles, continuous signatures and pagination, 8vo, strongly bound in recent boards, with label : some browning in places, but still a good to very good copy of an uncommon edition. First published in 1789 as ’A digest of the law of actions at nisi prius’. Of this enlarged second Dublin edition ESTC locates only three copies : D : MH-L, CSfH. Espinasse (1758–1834), law reporter and legal writer, second of four sons of Isaac Espinasse of Mansfield, Co. Dublin, and his wife, Mary Magenis. The family descended from an ancient Huguenot family, driven from France by the revocation of the edict of Nantes. Although he became a bencher of his inn in June 1809 and was treasurer of the inn in 1811, he never rose to eminence in the profession, preferring to concentrate on the nisi prius courts. Between 1793 and 1807, he issued a set of reports of cases at nisi prius which were among the first to report such cases. Unlike his contemporary John Campbell he did not edit out the ‘bad law’, and his reports gained a very poor reputation. Lord Denman commented that they ‘were never quoted without doubt and hesitation’, while Chief Baron Pollock quipped that he had heard only one half of what was said, and quoted the other. However, in reporting cases which turned largely on questions of evidence Espinasse's reports helped contribute to a development of the law of evidence in the early nineteenth century (ODNB).(4)ENGLISH PRE 1801; LAW; TRIALS; ENGLISH LITERATURE; SCOTLAND; HISTORY; TRIALS; DUBLIN PRINTED; LAW; ; ;