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SCHOALES ( John ) & LEFROY ( Thomas L

Currency:EUR Category:Antiques / Books & Manuscripts Start Price:10.00 EUR Estimated At:120.00 - 180.00 EUR
SCHOALES ( John ) & LEFROY ( Thomas L

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Auction Date:2012 Oct 20 @ 11:00 (UTC+1)
Location:38 Molesworth Street, Dublin, Dublin, ., Ireland
SCHOALES ( John ) & LEFROY ( Thomas L. ). Reports of cases argued and determined in the High Court of Chancery, in Ireland, during the time of Lord Redesdale. First volume … 1802, to … 1804 (and : Second volume … from … 1804, to … Lord Redesdale's resignation of the Great Seal [1806]. Dublin : Printed for John Jones … for J. Butterworth …London, and J. Cooke … Dublin 1806 (vol two : London : Printed for Joseph Butterworth … and John Cooke … Dublin 1821) 1806-21Pages xx, (8), 500 and errata leaf : viii, 762, complete in spite of erratic pagination, though without the half-titles, 2 vols, 8vo, uniform contemporary calf, with labels, gilt :a little wear at the joints but both volumes strongly bound and otherwise in very good to nice state. Curiously, not found on-line in NLI. One of Lefroy's claims to fame is that he enjoyed a youthful flirtation with Jane Austen, whom he had met while visiting relatives at Ashe, Hampshire, in January 1796. He later admitted to a ‘boyish love’ (Tomalin, 118) for her, and in her earliest surviving letter she makes her own feelings clear : ‘I am almost afraid to tell you how my Irish friend and I behaved. Imagine to yourself everything most profligate and shocking in the way of dancing and sitting down together ... He is a very gentlemanlike, good-looking, pleasant young man’. However, little is known of the precise nature of the relationship, though the tantalising evidence available has ‘given biographers room for a rich seam of speculation’ (Jones, 149), much of which inspired the film Becoming Jane (2007) in which Lefroy is the lead male character. Austen may have expected a proposal, but she was penniless, and after Lefroy left Hampshire she never saw him again. In October 1796 Austen had started the novel that would become Pride and prejudice (1813), and it has been suggested that Lefroy inspired the character of Mr Darcy. However, nothing in her correspondence substantiates this, and Lefroy's personality differed from Darcy's. It is more likely that the recurrent themes in her writings of brief infatuations, unsuitable matches, and romantic disappointments may be the true legacies of their encounter (IDNB).(2)IRELAND; LAW; LAW REPORTS; DUBLIN PRINTED; ; ; ; ; ; ; ;