A discourse wrytten by Sir John Sucklinge, knight, to the Earle of Dorsett, where hee shows how the Xtian religion may be maintained by reason [manuscript], 1637 August 25
1637
Available at Vault - Craven
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Title
A discourse wrytten by Sir John Sucklinge, knight, to the Earle of Dorsett, where hee shows how the Xtian religion may be maintained by reason [manuscript], 1637 August 25
Created/published
England, 1637 August 25
Description
1 volume ; 290 x 205 mm
Note
This is a PRELIMINARY RECORD. It may contain incorrect information. Please email catalog@folger.edu for assistance.
Genre/form
Place of creation/publication
Great Britain -- England, -- publication place.
Call number
273164 MS
Folger-specific note
From dealer's description: "Description Suckling, Sir John. A Discourse written by Sir John Sucklinge knight, To the Earle of Dorsett [An Account of Religion by Reason]. vellum Contemporary scribal manuscript, mostly in the distinctive and ornate secretary hand of the Feathery Scribe, the final two pages in another hand, with title page, dedicatory epistle, engrossed capitals, red ruled margins, twenty-eight pages; bound together with three other tracts in different hands and on different paper stocks, comprising "The Scotts Reasons against the Service booke" and related letters, eighteen pages, dated 25 August 1637; "The lords Grace of Canterbury's opinion For the nullity betweene the Earle of Essex; & his Lady Frances Howard," eight pages; "A Coppy of the Device for Alteration of Religion in the first yeere of Queen Elizabeth", fourteen pages; folio (290 x 205 mm), c.1640. Contemporary limp parchment, ink lettering on spine. Red folding-box and morocco-backed slipcase. Provenance Arthur A. Houghton, Jr. (1906-1990; bookplate, Christie's, 12 June 1980, lot 482) — John Fleming (Christie's, New York, 18 November 1988, lot 334). acquisition: Purchased at the foregoing sale through Bernard Quaritch Literature CELM SuJ 143 Catalogue Note Suckling's tract, which was a justification of Christian doctrine working from the principals of common sense, was written over a period of days during a trip to Bath in the company of John Davenant, Bishop of Salisbury. It enjoyed some circulation in manuscript before appearing in print in the posthumous collection Fragmenta Aurea (1646), and six scribal copies are recorded. This manuscript provides a fine example of the hand of the so-called Feathery Scribe, a prolific professional scribe who copied a huge range of state papers, tracts, and literary works from the mid-1620s to about 1640. The Feathery Scribe's output has been studied by Peter Beal, through which Beal has revealed the flourishing scribal culture of the 1630s (this manuscript is no. 24 in Beal's checklist of Feathery manuscripts in In Praise of Scribes [1998], p.227).."
Ordered from Daniel Wechsler, D9827, 2025-05-08, Robert S. Pirie sale, Sotheby's, New York, 2-4 December 2015, lot 776
Ordered from Daniel Wechsler, D9827, 2025-05-08, Robert S. Pirie sale, Sotheby's, New York, 2-4 December 2015, lot 776
Folger accession
273164