
AMERICANA TO 1820
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Analyzing Baptist Logic
Edwards,
Peter. Candid reasons for renouncing the principles of antipaedobaptism.
Also, an appendix, containing a short method with the Baptists. Exeter, NH:
Henry Ranlet, 1802. 8vo (20.3 cm, 8"). [4], 199, [1 (blank)] pp.
$125.00

First U.S. edition, following the London first of 1795, of an oft-printed, much-debated refutation of Abraham Booth's Paedo-baptism Examined. The author was for some years the pastor of a Baptist church before having a dramatic change of heart regarding infant baptism; Allibone says that with the present treatise, he “produced an argument of unusual power and conclusiveness. It cannot be overcome, and all attempts hitherto employed to set it aside have been feeble.”
The work includes substantial sections on female communion.
Click the interior image for an enlargement.
Shaw & Shoemaker 2175; Allibone 547. Period-style quarter tan cloth and light blue paper–covered sides, spine with printed paper label. Last page institutionally pressure-stamped; title-page with traces of paper adhesions to inner margin. Uncut copy; pages lightly age-toned, with a bit of soiling and light to moderate spotting. (25830)
Proto-Unitarian
Reaction to the
“AWAKENING”
Eells, Nathanael. Religion
is the life of God's people: a sermon preached at Boston, in the presence of
His Excellency William Shirley, Esq; Governour and Commander in chief in and
over His Majesty's Province of the Massachusetts-Bay in New-England; and the
Honourable His Majesty's Council, and the Honourable House of Representatives,
of the Province aforesaid, May 25th. 1743. Being the day for the election of
His Majesty's Council. Boston: Pr. by S. Kneeland & T. Green, Printers to
the Honourable House of Representatives, 1743. 8vo (19.5 cm, 7.625"). [1] f.,
43, [1 (blank)] pp.
$850.00


In May of 1743 the Convention of Ministers, consisting of the "Pastors of the Churches of Christ in the provinces of Massachusetts-Bay," met to reaffirm the establishment Protestant religion and denounce the Great Awakening. On the occasion of this meeting their moderator, the Rev. Nathanael Eells, Congregationalist minister and pastor of the Second Church in Scituate, preached this sermonwhich includes the significant phrase, "the one only living and true God; who is one in Essence, and three in Relations" (p. 8). This formulation in reaction to the Great Awakening characterizes the beginning of the Unitarian movement in the U.S., a movement which now seems very far indeed from anything this preacher would have foreseen. A fascinating item in the history of religious thought.
Evans 5173; Sabin 22006. Recent cloth-covered boards; a red leather spine label, gilt double ruled above and below with gilt lettering. 19th-century library rubber-stamps on verso of title leaf and bottom of p. 43. Light waterstain on title-page, occasional other light stains, overall remarkably clean. A nice, neat book.
(English
Literary Periodical). The monthly magazine, and British register,
part I. 1798. From January to June, inclusive. Vol. V. London: R. Phillips, 1798.
8vo (22.5 cm, 9"). Frontis., [8], 552 (i.e., 554; lacking 499–504, 120 used
twice in pagination, 521–28 numbered 321–28) pp.
$175.00
Collected issues of this monthly “literary journal,”
which actually served as a catchall also for general news and very various
items of interest—including articles on natural history and voyages or
travels; wedding, bankruptcy, and death notices; remarks on pictures, or on
theatrical and musical performances; and assorted free-floating anecdotes and
witticisms, as well as original poetry and reviews of contemporary publications.
The
preface notes that “by means of some new literary connexions in america,
we shall possess peculiar advantages in presenting to our Readers, accounts
of the most interesting circumstances belonging to the United States”—and
it was an American reader, in fact, who owned the present example.
This volume’s oversized, folding frontispiece shows the front facade
of the “new East India House now building in Leadenhall Street”;
there is also one in-text engraving of Lethington House in East Lothian, residence
of the Maitland family.

Provenance:
Front pastedown with inked ownership inscription of Joshua Gilpin,
a Quaker from Philadelphia who established the first paper mill in Delaware,
in 1787.
Disbound with front cover, front free endpaper, and frontispiece
separated; back cover lost, and signature sewing exposed/going, with many
leaves loose. Now contained in a simple, acid-free phase box. Edges untrimmed.
Minor offsetting and a few stray marks; mostly clean.
(English
Literary Periodical). The monthly magazine; or, British
register...Vol. XIX. Part I. for 1805. London: Richard Phillips, [1805]. 8vo (22.5
cm, 9"). [2], 719, [1 (blank)] pp.
$150.00
The contents are indexed; among the items of interest in this particular volume
are a biography of Kant,
an account of Jefferson’s inaugural speech,
an Italian travelogue, reviews of the newest portraits, and a publication announcement
for a book of “Greek, Albanian, Wallachian, Turkish, Arabian, Persian,
Chinese, and Moorish national Songs and Melodies” collected by Edward
Jones, the Prince of Wales’s bard.
A preface to another volume in this series notes that “by means of
some new literary connexions in america,
we shall possess peculiar advantages in presenting to our Readers, accounts
of the most interesting circumstances belonging to the United States”—and
it was an American reader, in fact, who owned the present example.
Provenance:
Front pastedown with armorial bookplate (bearing the motto “Factis dictisque
simplex”: Make what you say simple) of Joshua Gilpin, a Quaker from
Philadelphia who established the first paper mill in Delaware, in 1787.
Paper-covered boards, worn and chipped, covers all but off,
leather lost over spine; sewing going, with many signatures loose. Edges untrimmed,
some signatures uncut; occasional offsetting or small spots, with pages mostly
clean. Now housed in a simple, acid-free phase box.
(English Political Satire PLUS). Venus attiring the graces. London: J. Dodsley, 1777. 4to
(24.8 cm, 9.75"). 11, [1 (blank)] pp. [with]
[Mason, William?] [Ode to Mr. Pinchbeck,
upon his newly invented patent candle-snuffers. London: J. Almon, 1776]. [5]–11,
[1 (adv.)] pp.
$385.00
Satiric verse mocking fashionable English dress, accompanied by
a political satire addressed to Christopher Pinchbeck which includes the lines
“Haste then, and quash the hot Turmoil, /
That flames in Boston’s angry Soil . . .” The first
work is here in its first edition, while the second is likely an early printing.
Venus: ESTC T73277; Ode: ESTC T41985 (first ed.).
Recent marbled paper–covered boards, spine with printed paper label.
Second work lacking half-title and title-page. Inner margins of two leaves
reinforced; last line of advertising page shaved. Title-page and last few
leaves with moderate foxing; one page (not the title) stamped by a now-defunct
institution, with some offsetting to opposing page.
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