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PRICE ( Richard ). A discourse on the love of our country, delivered on Nov. 4

Currency:EUR Category:Antiques / Books & Manuscripts Start Price:10.00 EUR Estimated At:150.00 - 180.00 EUR
PRICE ( Richard ). A discourse on the love of our country, delivered on Nov. 4

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Auction Date:2012 Oct 20 @ 11:00 (UTC+1)
Location:38 Molesworth Street, Dublin, Dublin, ., Ireland
PRICE ( Richard ). A discourse on the love of our country, delivered on Nov. 4, 1789, at the Meeting-House in the Old Jewry, to the Society for Commemorating the Revolution in Great Britain. London printed : Boston, reprinted : by Edward E. Powars, 179040-pages, 8vo, recent wrapper : a half-inch horizontal strip has been neatly cut from the top and lower blank edge of the half-title, otherwise a well-margined and very good copy Thomas, Stephens & Jones, 38i, locating the BL copy only. Reprinting the text of the third edition. Though well represented in US libraries, ESTC has only the BL copy of this edition in UK or Irish libraries. Price, intimate friend of Franklin and the most influential British advocate of American independence, founder member of the Society for Constitutional Reform (1780) and when the Society for Commemorating the Revolution in Great Britain (known as the Revolution Society) revived its activities, he played a prominent part in its proceedings. Invited to address the Revolution Society at the meeting on 4 November 1789, his address, A Discourse on the Love of our Country (1789), welcomed with great enthusiasm the opening events of the French Revolution, holding that the French were doing for themselves what the British had done in 1688 and what the Americans had done in the War of Independence. In the evening of the same day at a dinner held by the society, he moved a resolution congratulating the French national assembly and welcoming the prospect of a common participation in the blessings of civil and religious liberty by the ‘first two kingdoms in the world’. His role in these proceedings and the publication of his address to the Revolution Society inflamed the wrath of Edmund Burke, who was provoked to write Reflections on the Revolution in France (1790), in which he assailed Price with vitriolic invective of the most uninhibited kind. Price replied briefly yet effectively in a preface which he attached to the fourth edition of the discourse, and it was left to his friends Joseph Priestley, Mary Wollstonecraft, Joseph Towers and Thomas Paine to make lengthier and more studied replies(ODNB).ENGLISH PRE 1801; BOSTON PRINTED; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ;