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CHRISTIE ( James ). The justice of God vindicated. A sermon preach'd in April 1740, on occasion of t

Currency:EUR Category:Antiques / Books & Manuscripts Start Price:10.00 EUR Estimated At:350.00 - 450.00 EUR
CHRISTIE ( James ). The justice of God vindicated. A sermon preach'd in April 1740, on occasion of t

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Auction Date:2012 Oct 20 @ 11:00 (UTC+1)
Location:38 Molesworth Street, Dublin, Dublin, ., Ireland
CHRISTIE ( James ). The justice of God vindicated. A sermon preach'd in April 1740, on occasion of the condemnation and execution of William Dolphin at Derby, found guilty of a robbery on the highway near Chesterfield in the County of Derby. By the Rev. James Christie, M.A. Derby : Printed by Sam. Drewry, for the Author, and sold by Jer. Roe, Sam Trimer and Sam. Fox, booksellers. Also by J. Slater in Chesterfield, and S. Simmons in Sheffield, 1740FIRST (ONLY) EDITION, pages 19, (1, blank), 8vo, pleasantly bound in old cloth-backed boards : the lower outer corner of leaf B2 torn off affecting only the last letter of the catch-word on recto, otherwise a very good to nice copy.ESTC locates only a single copy (Derby), a copy which is incorrectly described as having a frontispiece - on examination this 'frontispiece' proves to be an added flyleaf not a plate, not a part of the book, on which is written some biographical notes concerning Christie in an unidentified later hand. "If a reason be expected of my making choice of this subject, viz. The Justice of God … I thought it not improper, notwithstanding his own assertion of innocency … to make him sensible that his other sins might deserve the severest punishment in this world, and provoke God to inflict it … " - To the Reader. Christie, born in Ireland of Scottish parents, married March 10th, 1721, Isabel daughter of Alexander Campbell, provost of Wigtown in Galloway, by whom he had six children. Later, in Omagh, Co Tyrone, he married the orphan daughter of a priest named Buchanan but soon left her and, on March 2nd, 1730, using the name Christian, married Elizbeth Swain of Aylesford in Kent, where he was then curate. Reports of his former marriage forced him to flee to Boston in America, but being recognised there, he fled again, leaving his wife behind. By 1738 he was prosecuted in Derby for bigamy, but, whatever the outcome of that case, it seems that by 1740 he had been rehabilitated in local society. A rare Dublin printing provides a sketch of his career - "The Polygamist: or, the lustful priest. Giving an account of one James Christie, a clergyman, who is now confin'd in Derby jail, for having two wives [in verse]. With original letters that pass'd on both sides. Written by an Irish Laureat. London : A. More [1738]".ENGLISH PRE 1801; SERMONS; CRIME; DERBY PRINTED; LAW; TRIALS; HIGHWAYMEN; HIGHWAY ROBBERY; ; ; ;