Description: Full Title: Principles of Political Economy with some of their applications to social philosophy (Two Volume Set) Condition Continued: There are a small number of instances where the bottom edges are slightly jagged. I found two or three instances of a bottom corner loss, not coming near to the print, one instance of a tiny bit of bit of paper at the top edge being pulled from one facing pages to the other, not near the print. I didn't see much creasing, but there is a fair amount of crinkling, as you will often find with antiquarian books. I found about a dozen instances of a lightly penned 'x' or line at the margin next to a paragraph. There are no markings, no stampings, anywhere in the book. There are no attachments of any kind. And there is no other writing than what I have already mentioned. D. Appleton And Company, New York, 1865. Written by John Stuart Mill. In Two Volumes, From the Fifth London Edition. These volumes were purchased from a great-grandchild of Nathaniel Hawthorne's in Redding, Connecticut. They bear the signature of Hawthorne's son, Julian Hawthorne. His wife, Minne Amelung was living in Redding at the time of her death in 1925. Julian Hawthorne's mother was Sophia Peabody, a painter and illustrator. Julian was a writer and journalist. He wrote in many genres: poems, novels, short stories, mysteries and detective fiction, essays, travel books, biographies, and histories. He also helped to found Cosmopolitan magazine and Collier's Weekly. Late in his life he got into trouble with the law and spent a year in prison. In Volume I, he must have mistakingly thought he was opening up onto the front end paper, when in fact it was the rear end paper, so he signed his name there ( 'Julian Hawthorne, Concord, Massachusetts, Oct. 10th 1866' ). It now appears, hence, upside down. When he turned to the last page he would have realized his error and, in fact, wrote in the identical information on the front end paper as well. On page 43 which is the title page for 'Book I. Production' he signed his name again along with the following: '(?)ays End, Belmont, England, Twicker Lane. Nov. 20th 1875.' On the second front end paper of Volume II he signed his name along with the same Concord address and date, but below that in a blue, as opposed to black, pen he signed his name again along with 'Dresden 1873.' He was in Germany at the time. Between a couple of the pages in Volume II, I found a stiff gray card from 'The Authors Club requesting his (presumably) company at a meeting on March 26th, 1885. Between a couple of other pages I found a piece of paper with four sides, containing penciled notes filling two sides, with a third side 2/3rds filled, the notes appearing to relate to the two volumes, and presumably in his hand. I've provided a photograph of the front side. 'Principles of Political Economy was one of the most important economics or political economy textbooks of the mid-nineteenth century. It was revised until its seventh edition in 1871, shortly before Mill's death in 1873, and republished in numerous other editions. Beside discussing descriptive issues such as which nations tended to benefit more in a system of trade based on comparative advantage, the work also discussed normative issues such as ideal systems of political economy.'
Price: 180 USD
Location: Pound Ridge, New York
End Time: 2025-01-09T23:50:28.000Z
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Restocking Fee: No
Return shipping will be paid by: Seller
All returns accepted: Returns Accepted
Item must be returned within: 30 Days
Refund will be given as: Money Back
Binding: Hardcover
Language: English
Special Attributes: Julian Hawthorne's books with his Signatures, Notes on a separate paper, presumably Hawthorne's
Author: John Stuart Mill
Topic: Political Economy
Year Printed: 1865