Fall 2025 Catalogue

59 HISTORY & CULTURE 79ROUSSEAU, Jean-Jacques. The Confessions of J.J. Rousseau. London, 1783. 12mo, period-style full paneled brown calf gilt. $8800 Rare first edition in English of Rousseau’s magnificent Confessions and Reveries (its sequel and complement), considered among Rousseau’s finest works. “Confessions was published only posthumously; it was some time before Rousseau’s ideas seeped into the drinking water. In his own day he was provocative but also outlandish. As Leo Damrosch put it, Rousseau was after all understood to be ‘describing a state of nature that never existed, a political system that never could exist and an educational scheme that never should exist.’ Social inequality, the will of the people, inalienable rights were meaningless concepts when Rousseau began ranting about them. Imagination was out of fashion; he was tiptoeing around the asyet-undiscovered unconscious. He advocated idleness in the age of Adam Smith. If he suffered for being so much out of step with his own century, he can too easily be overlooked in ours. Without founding a school— it would have been inappropriate—Rousseau stands squarely if unsystematically at the root of democracy, autobiography, Romanticism, child-centered education, even psychoanalysis” (Stacy Schiff). Rousseau’s “devastatingly intimate” self-portrait has become one of “the landmarks of the literature of personal revelation and reminiscence” and the model for modern autobiography (Brereton 107; Drabble 851). First published in French, in Geneva, in 1782. As is usually the case, these two volumes contain the first half of the Confessions; the second half was not published until 1789 in French, with the English translation appearing in 1790. Interior fresh. Very handsomely bound. “I Have Resolved On An Enterprise Which Has No Precedent, And Which, Once Complete, Will Have No Imitation”

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