



Let [every man] reflect that the object upon which he is to decide is not a particular interest of the community, but the very existence of the nation...
—Alexander Hamilton, Federalist no. 85 The Federalist Papers
—Alexander Hamilton, Federalist no. 85 The Federalist Papers
[HAMILTON, Alexander (1739-1802), James MADISON (1751-1836) and John JAY (1745-1829)]
Details
The Federalist Papers
[HAMILTON, Alexander (1739-1802), James MADISON (1751-1836) and John JAY (1745-1829)]
The Federalist: A Collection of Essays, Written in Favour of the New Constitution, as Agreed Upon by the Federal Convention, September 17, 1787. New York: John and Andrew M'Lean, 1788.
A handsome copy of the first edition of a cornerstone of American political thought with distinguished provenance. The Federalist collects all 85 seminal essays written in defense of the newly drafted U.S. Constitution and published under the pseudonym "Publius" in various New York newspapers. Together, they constitute "the most thorough and brilliant explication of the Federal Constitution (or any other constitution) ever written" (Page Smith, The Constitution: A Documentary and Narrative History, pp. 263-264) and "one of the new nation's most important contributions to the theory of government" (Printing and the Mind of Man).
This series of essays is "justly recognized as a classic exposition of the principles of republican government" (R.B. Bernstein, Are We to be a Nation? The Making of the Constitution, 1987, p.242). The Federalist Papers grew out of the heated pamphlet wars and tumultuous debate over ratification of the Constitution. Concerned that the state of New York might refuse to ratify, Hamilton enlisted John Jay and James Madison to collaborate on a series of interpretive essays supporting the new plan of government and refuting point-by-point the objections of its many detractors. "Hamilton wrote the first piece in October 1787 on a sloop returning from Albany... He finished many pieces while the printer waited in a hall for the completed copy" (R. Brookhiser, Alexander Hamilton: American, 1999, pp.68-69). Due to Jay's illness and Madison's return to Virginia, the bulk of the 85 essays, in the end, were written by Hamilton. "Despite the hurried pace at which they worked—they ground out four articles nearly every week—what began as a propaganda tract, aimed only at winning the election for delegates to New York's state ratifying convention, evolved into the classic commentary upon the American Federal system" (F. McDonald, Alexander Hamilton, p.107). Washington, the former President of the Constitutional Convention, precisely spelled out the work's importance when he wrote that The Federalist "will merit the Notice of Posterity; because in it are candidly and ably discussed the principles of freedom and the topics of government, which will always be interesting to mankind." The present copy is the regular issue.
This copy has early commentary. In Federalist #68, below Hamilton's statement that: "This process of election affords a moral certainty, that the office of president, will never fall to the lot of any man, who is not in an eminent degree endowed with the requisite qualifications," an early reader has replied: "How different from what experience has shown. Mar. 21st 1815." Church 1230; Cohen 2818; Evans 21127; Ford 17; Grolier American 100; Howes H-114 ("d"=very rare); Federal Hundred 19; PMM, 234; Sabin 23979; Streeter sale 1049. R.B. Bernstein, Are We to Be a Nation? The Making of the Constitution, (1987), p.242. R. Brookhiser, Alexander Hamilton: American (1999), pp.68-69. F. McDonald, Alexander Hamilton: A Bibliography, p. 107.
Two volumes bound together, 12mo (163 x95 mm). (Title with short edge-tear and a tiny ink-burn hole, toned and some spotting, paper-flaw to 2B2 resulting in closed tear, pp.288-289 browned.) Contemporary sheep, red morocco lettering piece (rebacked with most of original spine laid down, leather darkened and restored, free endpapers worn at edges with loss to date of gift inscription).
[HAMILTON, Alexander (1739-1802), James MADISON (1751-1836) and John JAY (1745-1829)]
The Federalist: A Collection of Essays, Written in Favour of the New Constitution, as Agreed Upon by the Federal Convention, September 17, 1787. New York: John and Andrew M'Lean, 1788.
A handsome copy of the first edition of a cornerstone of American political thought with distinguished provenance. The Federalist collects all 85 seminal essays written in defense of the newly drafted U.S. Constitution and published under the pseudonym "Publius" in various New York newspapers. Together, they constitute "the most thorough and brilliant explication of the Federal Constitution (or any other constitution) ever written" (Page Smith, The Constitution: A Documentary and Narrative History, pp. 263-264) and "one of the new nation's most important contributions to the theory of government" (Printing and the Mind of Man).
This series of essays is "justly recognized as a classic exposition of the principles of republican government" (R.B. Bernstein, Are We to be a Nation? The Making of the Constitution, 1987, p.242). The Federalist Papers grew out of the heated pamphlet wars and tumultuous debate over ratification of the Constitution. Concerned that the state of New York might refuse to ratify, Hamilton enlisted John Jay and James Madison to collaborate on a series of interpretive essays supporting the new plan of government and refuting point-by-point the objections of its many detractors. "Hamilton wrote the first piece in October 1787 on a sloop returning from Albany... He finished many pieces while the printer waited in a hall for the completed copy" (R. Brookhiser, Alexander Hamilton: American, 1999, pp.68-69). Due to Jay's illness and Madison's return to Virginia, the bulk of the 85 essays, in the end, were written by Hamilton. "Despite the hurried pace at which they worked—they ground out four articles nearly every week—what began as a propaganda tract, aimed only at winning the election for delegates to New York's state ratifying convention, evolved into the classic commentary upon the American Federal system" (F. McDonald, Alexander Hamilton, p.107). Washington, the former President of the Constitutional Convention, precisely spelled out the work's importance when he wrote that The Federalist "will merit the Notice of Posterity; because in it are candidly and ably discussed the principles of freedom and the topics of government, which will always be interesting to mankind." The present copy is the regular issue.
This copy has early commentary. In Federalist #68, below Hamilton's statement that: "This process of election affords a moral certainty, that the office of president, will never fall to the lot of any man, who is not in an eminent degree endowed with the requisite qualifications," an early reader has replied: "How different from what experience has shown. Mar. 21st 1815." Church 1230; Cohen 2818; Evans 21127; Ford 17; Grolier American 100; Howes H-114 ("d"=very rare); Federal Hundred 19; PMM, 234; Sabin 23979; Streeter sale 1049. R.B. Bernstein, Are We to Be a Nation? The Making of the Constitution, (1987), p.242. R. Brookhiser, Alexander Hamilton: American (1999), pp.68-69. F. McDonald, Alexander Hamilton: A Bibliography, p. 107.
Two volumes bound together, 12mo (163 x95 mm). (Title with short edge-tear and a tiny ink-burn hole, toned and some spotting, paper-flaw to 2B2 resulting in closed tear, pp.288-289 browned.) Contemporary sheep, red morocco lettering piece (rebacked with most of original spine laid down, leather darkened and restored, free endpapers worn at edges with loss to date of gift inscription).
Provenance
Edward Penington, 1766-1834, of the prominent family of Philadelphia merchants (bookplate [no.659 in Allen's American Book-Plates], ownership inscription on title-page, early 19th century gift inscription to:)
William Pearson
Kenneth Chinn (bookplate).
William Pearson
Kenneth Chinn (bookplate).
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