Item #64492 DISCUSSING THE TEXT OF ALEXANDER ST. CLAIR BOYS' LECTURE, AS WELL AS HISTORIAN HENRY THOMAS BUCKLE'S BOOK ON ENGLAND, IN AN AUTOGRAPH LETTER SIGNED BY GRIMKE, AND WRITTEN TO ST. CLAIR BOYS, DATED APRIL 17, 1859. Frederick Grimke.

DISCUSSING THE TEXT OF ALEXANDER ST. CLAIR BOYS' LECTURE, AS WELL AS HISTORIAN HENRY THOMAS BUCKLE'S BOOK ON ENGLAND, IN AN AUTOGRAPH LETTER SIGNED BY GRIMKE, AND WRITTEN TO ST. CLAIR BOYS, DATED APRIL 17, 1859

Chillicothe [OH]: 17 April 1859. Single sheet, folded, 25 cm. 2-1/2 pp., nearly 600 words, with integral address and postmark. Grimke's letter from Chillicothe, Ohio, is addressed to Alexander St. Clair Boys of Hillsborough, Ohio. Small hole at wax seal, affecting a couple of words, legible.
Grimke thanks St. Clair Boys for sending him a copy of his lecture which he says "was the most finished composition you have written." Grimke also gives contemporary comment concerning the work of historian Henry Thomas Buckle. Buckle, an English historian, was the author of History of Civilization In England, which adopted the "scientific method" of historiography. His work was controversial and was not generally complimentary of government; a typical quote: "No great political improvement, no great reform, either legislative or executive, has ever been originated in any country by its rulers." In this letter Frederick Grimke (1791-1863), Yale attorney and member of the Ohio Supreme Court, writes to a colleague, Alexander St. Clair Boys (1817-1868), an Ohio State Representative, of Hillsborough, Ohio. Referring to the first volume of Buckle's history published in 1857: "It is the most important work which the British mind has put forth since Adam Smith's Wealth of Nations. It is the finest specimen of philosophical history extant, and will exercise a powerful influence, in entirely reforming the mode of writing history." Grimke goes on to say, "I think Mr. Buckle has committed a much greater error in the view he has taken of mental philosophy. His argument is the same as A Complis, and is one of the very few weak passages in the work." Grimke further comments on the consciousness of man which distinguishes him from the animal world. "We employ the faculties of compounding, obstructing, generalizing & etc. but then presuppose reflex consciousness, and could make no advance without it. But as I remarked before, the work of Mr Buckle is the production of a very superior intellect, and his errors are very few."
Frederick Grimke (1791-1863), the brother of the famous Abolitionist sisters Sarah and Angelina Grimke, had in 1848, published his own history book, Considerations Upon the Nature and Tendency of Free Institutions, which explains a profound interest in such matters. He also served on the Ohio Supreme Court from 1836-1842. Alexander St. Clair Boys (1817-1868) was a lawyer and member of the Ohio House of Representatives from 1852-53. Item #64492

Price: $350.00

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