Discourses upon the first Decade of T. Livius and the Prince

Niccolo MACHIAVELLI

Item#: 106429 We're sorry, this item has been sold

Discourses upon the first Decade of T. Livius and the Prince
Discourses upon the first Decade of T. Livius and the Prince

"NO MAN PREVIOUS TO KARL MARX HAS HAD AS REVOLUTIONARY AN IMPACT ON POLITICAL THOUGHT AS MACHIAVELLI": 1674 EDITION OF THE PRINCE AND DISCOURSES ON LIVY

MACHIAVELLI, Niccolo. Machiavel's Discourses upon the first Decade of T. Livius translated out of the Italian To which is added his Prince: with some Marginal Animadversions Noting and Taxing his Errors. The Second Edition much corrected & amended. London: Printed for Charles Harper and John Amery, 1674, 1673. Thick octavo, contemporary full mottled calf rebacked in calf-gilt, burgundy spine label, marbled edges.

Second collected edition in English of The Prince and the Discourses on Livy, translated by Edward Dacres, Machiavelli's first English translator, with engraved frontispiece portrait of Machiavelli, in contemporary calf boards.

"Hitherto political speculation had tended to be a rhetorical exercise based on the implicit assumption of Church or Empire. Machiavelli founded the science of modern politics on the study of mankind—it should be remembered that a parallel work to 'The Prince' was his historical essay on the first ten books of Livy. Politics was a science to be divorced entirely from ethics, and nothing must stand in the way of its machinery" (PMM 63). "Machiavelli is a popular symbol for the… completely unprincipled, and unscrupulous politician whose whole philosophy is that the end justifies the means. The highest law to Machiavelli, it is universally believed, was political expediency… From a comparative reading of [The Discourses and The Prince], one must come to the startling conclusion that Machiavelli was a convinced republican. He had no liking for despotism, and considered a combination of popular and monarchical government best. No ruler was safe without the favor of his people. The most stable states are those ruled by princes checked by constitutional limitations… His ideal government was the old Roman republic, and he constantly harked back to it in the Discourses… It is hardly disputable that no man previous to Karl Marx has had as revolutionary an impact on political thought as Machiavelli" (Downs, 12). This edition also includes the Life of Castruccio Castracani of Lucca and "A Relation of the Course taken by Duke Valentine in the murdering of Vitellozzo Vitelli, Oliverotto of Fermo, Paul, and the Duke of Gravina, all of them of the Family of the Orsini." The Prince was first published in English in 1640 and the Discourses on Livy first appeared in 1636, both translated by Edward Dacres (Cambridge Companion to Machiavelli, 253); Dacres' translations of the two works first appeared together in 1663 (Wing M134aA). This collection precedes the first collected edition of Machiavelli's Works by one year. With separate title page for The Prince, dated 1673, as issued. With final contents leaf. Wing M135A.

Interior fine; expert marginal repairs to leaves O2 and P, not affecting readability; small expert marginal repairs to leaves Ss and Xx4, not affecting text. Light expert restoration to contemporary calf boards. A beautiful copy of this important translation.

add to my wishlist ask an Expert