“TO REESTABLISH THE REALITY OF AN UNSEEN WORLD”: FIRST EDITION OF BOULTON’S PASSIONATE 1722 WORK ON THE POSSIBILITY AND REALITY OF MAGICK, SORCERY, AND WITCHCRAFT
BOULTON, Richard. The Possibility and Reality of Magick, Sorcery, and Witchcraft, demonstrated. Or, A Vindication Of a Compleat History of Magick, Sorcery, and Witchcraft In Answer to Dr. Hutchinson’s Historical Essay. London: Printed for J. Roberts, 1722. 12mo, contemporary full brown paneled calf rebacked, raised bands, brown morocco spine label.
First edition of this classic work by the 18th-century physician who sparked “the last great witchcraft debate in England,” handsomely bound in contemporary calf.
Oxford trained physician Richard Boulton is chiefly remembered as the “author of one of the last treatises to defend witchcraft.” An unlikely protege of Locke, Boulton published two works that fueled “the last great witchcraft debate in England” (Bostridge, Witchcraft, 96). The first of these was his anonymously published Complete History of Magick (1715-16), which ignited a powerful refutation by Francis Hutchinson in his 1718 Historical Essay. Boulton “returned to the charge in 1722, in The Possibility and Reality of Magick, Sorcery, and Witchcraft” (Kittredge, Notes on Witchcraft, 207). Here Boulton offers his spirited “Argument and Proof of a Diabolical Power,” extensively citing Hutchinson to contend that his 1718 Essay avoids “both giving Reasons to justify his Charge, as well as offering any Arguments to maintain his Cause” (100, v). Like Defoe, Boulton “was striving in an age of sensuous epistemology to restablish the reality of an unseen world. This serious concern of writers on apparitions became increasingly urgent after about 1660, for waning belief in witchcraft removed the most striking manifestation of man’s immortality” (Baine, Defoe, American Philosophical Society, 335). Ornamental engraved initials and headpieces. Allibone, 223. See Kernot, 13. Contemporary faint marginalia to endpapers and one leaf (B2).
Text quite clean, minor edge-wear to contemporary calf. A very handsome copy of this scarce 18th-century work.