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[HEATHCOTE ( Ralph )]. Sylva : or, the Wood. Being a collection of anecdotes

Currency:EUR Category:Antiques / Books & Manuscripts Start Price:10.00 EUR Estimated At:180.00 - 220.00 EUR
[HEATHCOTE ( Ralph )]. Sylva : or, the Wood. Being a collection of anecdotes

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Auction Date:2012 Oct 20 @ 11:00 (UTC+1)
Location:38 Molesworth Street, Dublin, Dublin, ., Ireland
[HEATHCOTE ( Ralph )]. Sylva : or, the Wood. Being a collection of anecdotes, dissertations, characters, apophtegms, original letters, bon mots, and other little things. By a Society of the Learned. The third edition, corrected and enlarged. Dublin : Printed by P. Byrne, No. 108, Grafton-Street, 1789FIRST IRISH EDITION, pages xvi, 368, 8vo, contemporary pale brown calf, gilt ruled spine, with label, gilt, green edges : a nice, fresh copy. An interesting collection of essays on conduct and human behaviour, "A letter of Dean Swift to his curate", "Of abuses in female dress", "Of fine gentlemen : with the character and description of an upstart", "Against the marriage of old men", "Of government …", "Of the promulgation of laws", "Electioneering", "An apology for Dr James's fever powder", "Against the abridgnment of labour", "Of jesting and frolic, as well as jesting upon serious occasions : and of David Hume, Esq. so far as he is concerned in this", Of the liberty of the press", "Of the spirit and conduct of East India adventurers", "Of ante-nuptial fornication, with a hint or two for its prevention", "Of personal identity", "Of academies and waterologers", Of great men ; and of Dr Samuel Johnson", "Upon David Hume's moral character", "Concerning the dispute between Mr. Hume and Mr. Rousseau", etc., etc. “The Third Edition, Corrected and Enlarged”; in fact the first Irish edition, after London editions of 1786 and 1788. Not nearly so genial as the title would imply, and full of invective against, especially, Samuel Johnson and David Hume. The attack on Johnson describes him as, among other things, “the meanest of bigots,” and refers to The Lives of the Poets as “malevolent.” The various attacks on Hume are apparently a follow-up to Heathcote’s 1776 anti-Hume Letter to Horace Walpole, and somewhat disingenuously presume to contradict Adam Smith: "was he so supremely excellent, as Dr. Smith describes him? was there not something little, contracted, (I had almost said) worldly, in his make? did not his soul want much of . . . dignity and greatness?"ALSO WITH THIS LOT: (1) WALPOLE ( Horace ). A catalogue of the royal and noble authors of England, with a list of their works. In two volumes. The third edition, corrected and enlarged. Dublin: Printed for George Faulkner … and Hulton Bradley, 1759. FIRST IRISH EDITION, pp 166, (2) : (2), 147 - 288, (4), complete thus, 2 vols in 1, large 12mo, contemporary mottled calf, neatly and sympathetically rebacked, with label, gilt : bookplate of St Edmud's College on front endpper and 19C signature of "R.Stanfield". Hazen, Strawberry Hil, 3 (p.36). First published at Strawberry Hill during the previous year. There was another Dublin issue, also 1759, with a slightly different pagination and without a title-page to the second volume. The eleven Irish peers included are separately indexed.(2)ENGLISH LITERATURE; ENGLISH PRE 1801; DUBLIN PRINTED; DUBLIN PRINTED; ; ; ; ; ; ; ;