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GREAT BRITAIN, FOREIGN OFFICE

Currency:EUR Category:Antiques / Books & Manuscripts Start Price:10.00 EUR Estimated At:100.00 - 150.00 EUR
GREAT BRITAIN, FOREIGN OFFICE

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Auction Date:2012 Oct 20 @ 11:00 (UTC+1)
Location:38 Molesworth Street, Dublin, Dublin, ., Ireland
GREAT BRITAIN, FOREIGN OFFICE. A correct copy of the papers relating to the negotiation between Great Britain and France, with the correspondence of the two powers ; as received and communicated to the Secretary of State for the Foreign Department, by the Right Honble. [James Harris] Lord Malmesbury : to which is added, the declaratiuon of His Britannic Majesty, and prefixed, the notes of Mr. Wickham, M. Barthelemi, and Count Wedel Jarlberg. Printed for John Stockdale, Decr 29th, 1796FIRST EDITION, pages 59, (1, adverts), 8vo, recent paper wrapper : a very good copy ESTC locates copies at CSmH and KU-S only : none in UK or Ireland. Malmesbury's final missions were linked to the search for peace with France in 1796–7. Britain's quintessential ancien régime diplomatist now encountered the very different methods and practices of the French revolutionaries. While the outward forms of the old diplomacy were observed, the blunter, less flexible style of the republican negotiators, who set out and then stuck to their demands, was a shock to Malmesbury, used to the give and take of diplomatic negotiations. He also found the sharp reduction in the number of social events, at which diplomacy could be pursued by other means, an obstacle to his established way of conducting discussions. He was forced to pursue his aims entirely in a series of formal conferences. In mid-October 1796 he landed in France and, because of the bad state of the roads, made his way slowly to Paris. Edmund Burke, the opponent of any compromise with the hated revolution, sardonically observed that the journey took so long because ‘he went the whole way on his knees’ (Ehrman, 2.645). Within two months it was clear that no settlement could be concluded. Negotiations were broken off by Britain in December and Malmesbury was recalled (ODNB).ALSO WITH THIS LOT: (1) [ROSE ( George )]. The proposed system of trade with Ireland explained. Printed by and for John Nichols … , sold by … G. G. and J. J. Robinson … , 1785. FIRST EDITION, 58-pp, without half-title, 8vo, recent wrapper : a small faint stamp in two places and wanting a small portion of lower inner blank margin of title-page : very good Goldsmiths’ 12954. (2) MAYNE ( Wm. ), Baron Newhaven. A short address to the public ; containing some thoughts how the national debt may be reduced, and all home taxes, including land-tax, abolished. By William, Lord Newhaven. London : Printed for J. Debrett, opposite Burlington House, Piccadilly, 1786. FIRST EDITION, pages (2), 23, (3, adverts), 8vo, recent paper wrapper : a very good copy. Goldsmiths 13248. Kress B.1102. Black 1473. “Place a tax of 1% on the value of all real and personal property and abolish all internal taxes including the land tax, or readjust the internal taxes.” - Williams I, 348.(3) FOX ( Charles James ). The speech of … in the House of Commons, on Monday, the 3rd of February, 1800, on a motion for an address to the throne, approving of the refusal of ministers to treat with the French Republic. A new edition. London : Printed for J. Debrett, Piccadilly, by A. Wilson, Wild-Court, Lincoln's Inn Fields [1800]. Pages (4), 47, (1, imprint), with the half-title, 8vo, recent paper wrapper : a nice copy. An uncommon edition, with ESTC locating three copies in the UK (L and O), none in Ireland, and six in the USA (C-S, CSmH, TxHR, CtHT-W, IU and CtY-BR). “He was indignant at Lord Grenville's reply to the overtures in the First Consul's letter of 25 Dec., and in deference to the wishes of his friends attended the debate on it on 3 Feb. 1800. His speech, except at the end, is rather an indictment of the ministers for entering on the war than a condemnation of Grenville's letter.” – DNB.(4) GEORGE II. Letters, in the original, with translations, and messages, that passed between the King, Queen, Prince, and Princess of Wales ; on occasion of the birth of the young Princess London : Printed, and sold by J. Roberts in Warwick-Lane, 1737. Pages 30, (2, blank), 8vo, recent paper wrapper : a very good copy. In French and English in parallel columns. Tracing the final estrangement between King George and Queen Caroline on the one hand and Prince Frederick and Princess Augusta on the other.(5)ENGLISH PRE 1801; HISTORY; ENGLAND; FRANCE; MILITARY; ECONOMICS; IRELAND; TAXATION; NAPOLEON; MONARCHY; ;