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WATSON ( Richard ), Bp of Llandaff

Currency:EUR Category:Antiques / Books & Manuscripts Start Price:10.00 EUR Estimated At:60.00 - 80.00 EUR
WATSON ( Richard ), Bp of Llandaff

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Auction Date:2012 Oct 19 @ 18:00 (UTC+1)
Location:38 Molesworth Street, Dublin, Dublin, ., Ireland
WATSON ( Richard ), Bp of Llandaff, FRS. A discourse delivered to the clergy of the Archdeaconry of Ely, on May 9th & 10th, 1780. Cambridge, Printed by J. Archdeacon, printer to the Uiversity ; for J. Deighton, in Cambridge … , 1780FIRST EDITION, pages (2), 17, (1, blank), 4to, recent paper wrapper : the title-leaf lightly browned, otherwise a large and very good copy. Offering “a few thoughts on the Encouragement of Oriental Literature”.ALSO WITH THIS LOT: (1) SHIPLEY ( Jonathan ), Bp. A sermon preached before the House of Lords, in the Abbey church of St. Peter, Westminster, on Tuesday, January, 30, 1770, being the day appointed to be observed as the day of the martyrdom of King Charles I. London, Printed for T. Cadell in the Strand, 1770. FIRST EDITION, pages (4), 23, (1, blank), with half-title, 4to, recent wrapper : very good. Endorsing the whig doctrine as to the foundation of royal supremacy. During the 1770s Shipley (1713–88), bishop of St Asaph, became very friendly with Benjamin Franklin, whose opinions on the American question he shared, and with the radical dissenters Joseph Priestley and Richard Price.(2) WATKINS ( Roger ). A sermon preached at the visitation holden for the Lord Bishop of Lincoln, by the Archdeacons of Lincoln and Leicester in the cathedral church of Lincoln, August 24th, 1778. By Roger Watkins, M.A. Rector of Fillingham, and late Fellow of Balliol College in Oxford. Published at the request of the Clergy. Lincoln : Printed and sold by W. Wood. Mr. Crowder, in Pater-Noster-Row, London. Mess. Merrills and Fletcher at Cambridge. Mr. Fletcher, at Oxford. Mr. Smart at Worcester. Mr. Turner at Ludlow. [1778]. FIRST (ONLY) EDITION, 22-pages, wanting half-title, 4to, recent paper wrapper : a large and very good copy with the errata corrected in a contemporary hand. ESTC locates only two copies : L and LIN. Apparently, there were no other printings.(3) KING ( James ). A sermon preached before the honourable House of Commons, at St. Margaret's, Westminster, on Wednesday, January XXX, 1771. London : Printed by J. and H. Hughs, near Lincoln's-Inn-Fields ; and sold by J. Wilkie … T. Payne … and J. Walter … , 1771. FIRST EDITION, 20-pp, with half-title, 4to, recent wraps : a large and very good-nice copy. On the grounds and obligations of civil government.(4) BARFORD ( Wm. ). A sermon preached before the honourable House of Commons, at St. Margaret's, Westminster, on Tuesday, January XXX, 1770. London : Printed by J. Hughs, near Lincoln's-Inn-Fields ; and sold by T. Payne, near the Mews-Gate, 1770. FIRST EDITION, 22-pp, with half-title, 4to, recent wraps : a large and very good-nice copy. Barford (1719-92), Church of England clergyman and classical scholar, appointed chaplain to the Commons by Sir John Cust, the speaker, but held the office for only one session. The next speaker appointed another chaplain, and Barford's friends feared he would be deprived of the usual preferment conferred on holders of the office ; but on the plea that he was to be considered chaplain, appointed not by the speaker but by the house, it was resolved, 9 May 1770, that the king be addressed to confer some dignity upon him. He was consequently installed a prebendary of Canterbury in June of the same year(5) PORTEUS ( Beilby ). Two sermons preached at the Chapel-Royal, St. James's. The second edition. London : Printed by H. Hughs, near Lincoln's-Inn-Fields : and sold by T. Payne … and J. and T. Merrill, at Cambridge, 1772. Pages (4), 36, 4to, recent paper wrapper : a large and very good copy. One of the most significant, albeit underrated church figures of the 18C. His sermons continued to be read by many, and his legacy as a leading abolitionist was such that his name was almost as well-known in the early 19C as those of Wilberforce and Thomas Clarkson – but a hundred years later he had become one of the ‘forgotten abolitionists’, and today his role has largely been ignored and his name consigned to the footnotes of history. His primary claim to fame in the 21C is for his poem on Death and, possibly unfairly, as the supposed prototype for the pompous Mr Collins in Jane Austen's Pride and Prejudice.(6) PARKER ( Wm. ), FRS. A sermon before the honourable House of Commons, at St. Margaret's, Westminster. On Monday, January 31, 1757. Being appointed to be observed as the day of the martyrdom of King Charles I. London, Printed for R. Baldwin, at the Rose in Pater-noster-Row, and J. Fletcher in the Turl, Oxford, 1757. FIRST EDITION, 24-pages, with the half-title, 4to, recent paper wrapper : the first and final page lightly and evenly dusty, otherwise a large and very good to nice copy. Parker (1714-1802) was eminent as a pulpit orator, and his works consist, for the most part, of single sermons, in which he defends revealed religion and the Mosaic history against the attacks of Bolingbroke, Morgan, and Conyers Middleton (ODNB).(7) MARKHAM ( Wm. ), Abp. A sermon preached before the House of Lords, in the abbey church of St. Peter, January 31. 1774. Being the day appointed as the day of the martyrdom of King Charles I. London : Printed for T. Payne, at the Mews Gate, 1774. FIRST EDITION, 22-pp, with half-title, 4to, recent wrapper : a large and very good copy. Markham (1719-1807), archbishop of York, baptized at Kinsale, Co Cork, followed his father's example and took up teaching. In 1753 the headship of Westminster School fell vacant and Markham's familiarity with the school and his high academic standing secured him the post. There he remained for the next eleven years, establishing a reputation as one of the most formidable headmasters of the 18C, though more for his managerial than for his pedagogical skills. Teaching was never Markham's first priority but he had an undeniable presence in the classroom. One of his pupils, Jeremy Bentham (Westminster, 1755–60, famously described Markham in the form room as ‘an object of adoration’. Many other members of the later Georgian élite received their schooling at his hands. Without personal wealth or high birth he sedulously but never fawningly cultivated the powerful throughout his life. He watched over the interests of former pupils, while many of them tended his (ODNB).(8) THOMAS ( John ), Bp. A sermon preached before the House of Lords, in the Abbey-Church of Westminster, on Wednesday, January 30th, 1744. Being the day appointed to be observed as the day of the martyrdom of King Charles I. The second edtion. London : Printed by J. Oliver, in Bartholomew-Close ; and sold by E. Nutt, and E. Cook …, 1745. Pages 23 (1, adverts), wanting half-title, 4to, recent paper wrapper : the first and final page lightly dusty, otherwise a very good copy. "While they promise them liberty, they themselves are the servants of corruption." - On 2 Peter II. 19.(9)ENGLISH PRE 1801; CAMBRIDGE PRINTED; LANGUAGE; RELIGION; SERMONS; LINCOLN PRINTED; THEOLOGY; ; ; ; ;