Couverture souple. Broché. 213 pages
Reference : 207891
Livre. Traduction de l'allemand de Jeanne Ancelet-Hustache. Editions du Seuil, 1979.
Librairie et Cætera
Mme Sophie ROSIERE
+33 (0) 5 56 88 08 45
Envoi par la Poste à réception du paiement. PAIEMENT : Virement, chèque ou CB (immédiat et sécurisé avec Stripe) EXPEDITION : du mardi au samedi en courrier ordinaire ou suivi, sous étuis recyclables et/ou réutilisés. Les livres sont nettoyés, réparés si besoin, et couverts de papier cristal. FRAIS D'EXPEDITION : Pour un livre standard (moins de 500g): FRANCE : de 4,50 à 6,70€ en courrier suivi. Vers l'étranger, les frais de port indiqués sont en courrier ordinaire SANS SUIVI. Envoi suivi sur demande. EUROPE : 1 à 1,50€ au tarif économique livres et brochures AUTRES PAYS : 2 à 3€ au tarif économique livres et brochures. Tous les tarifs postaux sont consultables ici : http://www.librairie-et-caetera.fr/2021/01/tarifs-postaux-2021.html RETOUR : Conformément à la législation sur la vente à distance, vous disposez d'un droit de retour des ouvrages pendant 14 jours. Les frais de port restent à votre charge lorsqu'il s'agit d'une erreur de commande de votre part et à notre charge si le livre n'est pas conforme à notre description.
[Outhenin-Chalandre Fils] - BOSSUET, Jacques-Bénigne ; (BAUSSET, Cardinal Louis-François de)
Reference : 59480
(1840)
20 vol. in-8 reliure de l'époque demi-basane blonde, dos lisse orné, Outhenin-Chalandre Fils, Besançon, Paris, 1840-1841. Titre complet : Oeuvres Complètes de Bossuet (20 Tomes - Complet) Tome : Ecriture sainte: Liber Psalmorum ; Veteris et Novi Testamenti cantica ; Supplenda in Psalmos ; Proverbia ; Ecclesiastes ; Canticum canticorum ; Sapientia ; Ecclesiasticus ; Explication de la prophétie d'Isaïe ; Explication du Psaume XXI ; 2 : Ecriture sainte: L' Apocalypse avec une explication ; Avertissement aux protestants ; De excidio Babylonis ; Réflexions morales ; Lettres et instructions sur le Nouveau Testament ; 3 : Controverse, piété : Défense de la tradition et des saints pères ; Instruction sur la lecture de l'écriture sainte ; Sur les trois Magdeleines ; Élévations sur les mystères ; 4 : Piété : Méditations sur l'Évangile ; Traité de la concupiscence ; Opuscoles ; 5 : Sermons: Avent ; Carême ; 6 : Sermons : Carême ; Fêtes et dimanches ; Fêtes de la Sainte Vierge ; 7 : Sermons : Fêtes ; Panégyriques ; État religieux ; Oraisons funèbres ; 8 : Administration: Catéchisme de Meaux ; Prières ecclésiastiques ; Ouvrages pour le diocèse de Meaux, pour le clergé de France ; 9 : Éducation : Traité du libre arbitre ; Discours sur l'histoire universelle et suite ; Lettre à Innocent XI et réponse ; Connoissance de Dieu et de soi-même ; Politique tirée de l'Écriture ; 10 : Controverse : Histoire des variations ; Avertissements aux protestants ; 11 : Controverse : Suite des avertissement aux protestants ; Exposition de la doctrine de l'Église catholique ; Fragments sur diverses matières de controverse ; 12 : Controverse : Instructions pastorales sur les promesses de l'Église ; Réfutation du catéchisme du sieur Paul Ferry ; Conférence avec M. Claude, etc. ; Traité de la commun. sous les deux espèces ; Défense de la tradition sur la communion sous une espèce ; 13 : Controverse : Explication de la messe ; Lettres pastorales ; Projets de reunion entre les catholiques et les protestants ; 14 : Controverse. Ouvrages sur le quiétisme: Instructions sur les états d'oraison ; Tradition des nouveaux mystiques ; Pièces diverses sur la doctrine de M. de Cambrai ; 15 : Controverse. Ouvrages sur le quiétisme: Mystici in tuto ; Schola in tuto ; Quietismus redivivus ; Relation sur le quiétisme, etc. ; Condamnation du Livre des maximes des saints ; Defesio declarations conventus cleri Gallicani ; 16 : Controverse: Defesio declarations conventus cleri Gallicani. Corollarium et appendix ; 17 : Correspondance: Lettres et mélanges ; Maximes et réflexions sur la comédie ; Lettres de piété et de direction ; 18 : Correspondance: Lettres de piété et de direction ; Lettres sur l'affaire du quiétisme ; 19 : Correspondance: Lettres sur l'affaire du quiétisme ; Lettres diverses ; Lettres inédites ; Table générale des matières ; 20 : Histoire de Bossuet, évêque de Meaux composée sur les manuscrits originaux par le cardinal de Bausset ; nouv. éd. contenant une notice historique sur la vie et les ouvrages de l'auteur, ainsi qu'une table générale des matières.
Exemplaire bien complet des 20 volumes, dont le dernier est composé de la vie de Bossuet par Bausset (la table générale des matières se trouve dans le tome 19). Etat très satisfaisant (griffures au dos du tome 7, dos passés , bon état par ailleurs)
London, Printed by Thomas Harper for Thomas Knight, 1634. 8vo. In contemporary full calf. Small paper-label pasted on to upper part of spine. Wear to extremities. A few holes to front board and front board partly detached. Contemporary annotations to front free end-paper. A few worm-tracts to lower and outer margin, primarily affecting pp. 187-236, with some loss of text. (12), 419, (1), (2), 29, (1) pp.
Rare seventh edition of Maxey’s sermons preached before the king. Originally published in 1605 containing only three sermons, the work was reprinted with additional serimons in 1610, 1614, 1619 and the present 1634-edition containing the following nine sermons: 1, The golden chaine of mans salvation. 2, The fearefull point of hardening. 3, The churches sleepe. 4, The agonie of Christ. 5, The vexation of Saul. 6 The sacrifice of Abraham. 7, Hallelu-jah. 8, A marriage sermon. 9, The wise-men guided by a starre. “Anthony Maxey served as the dean of Windsor and was believed to have hailed from Essex. He received his education at Westminster School and was later admitted to Trinity College, Cambridge, in April 1578. His compelling pulpit oratory and aversion to tobacco caught the attention of James I, who appointed him as his chaplain and later as dean of Windsor and registrar of the Order of the Garter in 1612. Maxey was known for his corrupt practices, as he attempted to gain preferment through bribery, offering money to Sir Henry Hobart and bidding for the vacant see of Norwich before his death in May 1618. He was buried in St. Martin-in-the-Fields, London, having outlived his wife and leaving provisions in his will for his relatives and servants, except for his cook Roger and clerk Robert Berry, whom he accused of misconduct with tobacco and alcohol. His bequest included his books, which he left to be taken by the authorities for the public library, likely referring to the University of Cambridge's library.” (DNB). Allthough reprinted several time copies are scarce in the trade - all editions are rare.
London, E. Cotes, 1664 (+) London, Henry Seile, 1660. Folio (295 x 200 mm). In contemporary full calf with six raised bands and ruled fillets to boards. Stains and soiling to extremities. Lower outer corner of both front and back board damaged. Front free end-paper with index wirtten in a neat contemporary hand. Title-page of first work detached. Light occassional marginal dampstaining, but internally generally nice and clean. (56), 400, (8), (32), 416 pp.l
Fifth and second edition, respectively, of Sanderson’s sermons that address different audiences within the social and political hierarchy of 17th-century England. Each set is structured according to the audience being addressed: the clergy, the magistrates or civil authorities, the court and the general public. Robert Sanderson (1587 – 1663) was an English theologian and casuist.
London, Printed for the Author, 1665. 4to. In contemporary full calf with four raised bands and richly gilt spine. Small paper-label pasted on to top of spine. Light wear to extremities. Wormtract to lower outer margin of first 20 ff. occassionally touching text, otherwise a good copy. (8), 128, (16), 225, (3), 43, (3), 56, (8), 19, (3), 44, (2), 67 pp.
Rare first edition of Griffith’s sermons. William Griffith (1587 – 1673) born at Treflan near Caernarvon, had a notable ecclesiastical career marked by education and controversy. Educated at Christ Church, Oxford and Jesus College, Cambridge he was ordained as a priest in 1607. He served as rector in Foscott, Buckinghamshire and held positions in London, where his anti-Puritan sermons caused conflict. Griffith preached notable funeral sermons, including those of Sir Richard Bulkeley in 1621 and Katherine Lewis in 1644, and participated in the burial of Archbishop John Williams in 1650. He became rector of Trefdraeth (1626), dean of Bangor (1634), and faced allegations of neglecting his wife in 1635. Appointed as the king's chaplain and later Bishop of Ossory, Ireland his tenure was disrupted by the Civil War, leading him to flee Ireland. He resumed his bishopric after the Restoration in 1661, becoming the first to pray publicly for King Charles II in Ireland. (see Dictionary of Welsh Biography)
London, Printed by Andrew Clark for Robert Scott, 1675. Folio (375 x 245 mm). In contemporary full calf with six raised bands and double ruled fillets to boards. Small paper-label pasted on to top of spine. Wear to extremities, leather on hinges split, showing the cords and boards underneath. With loss of leather to spine-ends and corners. Front free end-paper with annotations in contemporary hand. Previous owner's name in contemporary hand to title-page. Internally nice and clean. (4), LV, (4), 1013, (3) pp.
The rare first edition of Hacket’s posthumously published sermons. John Hacket (1592–1670) was an English churchman and academic. He was born in London and educated at Westminster School and Trinity College, Oxford. He later became the president of Trinity College, Oxford, in 1630 and was appointed Bishop of Lichfield and Coventry in 1661. Hacket was known for his scholarship, particularly in theology, and for his support of the Anglican Church during a period of political and religious upheaval in England. He wrote several works on religious and historical subjects, including a biography of the poet John Donne. Hacket played a significant role in the religious and intellectual life of his time. “In addition to the Latin play of ‘Loyola’ and his great work on the life of Archbishop Williams, a small work entitled ‘Christian Consolations’ (1671, republished 1840) has been incorrectly attributed to Hacket. ‘A Century of Sermons on several remarkable subjects’ was edited, with a memoir, by Thomas Plume in 1675. In company with Ben Jonson he translated Bacon’s ‘Essays’ into Latin. His skill in using the Latin tongue was considerable, and his reading was varied and extensive. His biographer admits that he was of a hasty and choleric temper, but very quickly reconciled to any who had offended him. His quarrel with Dean Wood, who afterwards succeeded him as bishop, and was suspended for simoniacal practices, caused, according to Pepys, considerable scandal, but the bishop enjoyed high estimation in the opinion of all good men. He married Elizabeth, daughter of W. Stebbing of Soham, Suffolk and after her death in 1638, Frances, daughter of Mr. Bennet of Cheshire, and widow of Dr. Bridgman, prebendary of Chester. He had several children. His eldest son, Andrew, was knighted, and was a master in chancery he erected a recumbent effigy to his father’s memory in Lichfield Cathedral. There is an engraving of this tomb and also of a portrait of Hacket in ‘A Century of Sermons.” (www.apuritansmind.com).