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O'LEARY ( Arthur ). Miscellaneous tracts on several interesting subjects. The third edition, enlarge

Currency:EUR Category:Antiques / Books & Manuscripts Start Price:10.00 EUR Estimated At:80.00 - 100.00 EUR
O'LEARY ( Arthur ). Miscellaneous tracts on several interesting subjects. The third edition, enlarge

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Auction Date:2012 Oct 19 @ 18:00 (UTC+1)
Location:38 Molesworth Street, Dublin, Dublin, ., Ireland
O'LEARY ( Arthur ). Miscellaneous tracts on several interesting subjects. The third edition, enlarged and corrected. Printed and published by P. Keating, 1791. [bound with :] A defence of the conduct and writings of the Rev. Arthur O’Leary, during the late disturbances in Munster : with. . . an Account of the Risings of the White-Boys … Printed for P. Keating, 1787. [and :] A Review of the important controversy between Dr. Carroll and the Reverend Messrs. Wharton and Hawkins … Printed for, and sold by the Editor, P. Keating … , 1786 1791-87-86Together three works in one vol, 8vo, with fine mezzotint portrait of O'Leary to first work, the title-page of which is inscribed (in a sufficiently shaky hand that there is a good chance it is that of the sixty-some year-old author) “For Thomas Francklin Esqr ex dono authoris.”, pages xx, 417, (1) : (2), viii, (9) - 175, (1, adverts) : (2), 94, (1, errata), (2, adverts), 8vo, contemporary calf, gilt ruled spine, with label, gilt : the first few leaves a bit soiled and very slightly creased, a faint old inkstamp on the blank recto of portrait, the binding slightly worn with upper joint largely split, but very strong, otherwise in very good state throughout.Important and influential tracts : O'Leary (1729-1802), Cork-born Capuchin friar and controversialist, remembered for his 'An Essay on Toleration' (1780), making the case for liberty of conscience. He was by far the most brilliant and popular writer on the catholic side, but provoked much criticism by his acceptance of a government pension. Third edition, “enlarged and corrected” of the “Tracts” and first editions of the other two works.ALSO WITH THIS LOT: (1) HAVERTY ( Martin ). The History of Ireland, ancient and modern. Derived from our native annals, from the most recent researches of eminent Irish scholars and antiquaries, from the state papers, and from all the resources of Irish history now available. With copious topographical and general notes. Dublin : James Duffy, 1860. FIRST EDITION, with additional engraved title-page (dated 1859), frontispiece, a double-page map and pages vi, (1), (1, blank), 528, 521(bis) - 544, 553-774, complete thus in spite of pagination jumps, 8vo, contemporary half calf, endleaves lightly foxed, binding rubbed but sound and very strong : a very good copy. This lengthy, exhaustive history of the island from the early Celts to the act of union was made possible, as he gracefully acknowledged, by the research work of Wilde, R. R. Madden and especially John O'Donovan and Eugene O'Curry. Haverty brought their learning to a wider audience in his well written and well annotated work, which ran to a second edition in 1885 and was considered by R. J. O'Duffy the nineteenth century's only accessible school history book, other than Catechism of the history of Ireland by William J. O'Neill Daunt. Haverty strove for impartiality and affected to be above politics (IDNB) (2) JOYCE ( Patrick W. ). A Social History of Ancient Ireland. Dublin : M. H. Gill & Son, Ltd., 1920. SECOND EDITION (third impression), with a folding map and more than 358 full-page and other illustrations, a few coloured, pages xxiii, 632 : xi, 651, 2 vols, 8vo, original publisher's green remainder cloth : a nice, fresh copy of this standard work.(3)ENGLISH PRE 1801; RELIGION; IRELAND; THEOLOGY; POLITICS; TOLERATION; HISTORY; DUBLIN PRINTED; ; ; ;