A Catalogue of Rare Books and Documents, Many Recent
Transcription
A Catalogue of Rare Books and Documents, Many Recent
A Catalogue of Rare Books and Documents, Many Recent Acqusitions from Fine Private Collections AUTUMN 2014 baumanrarebooks . com 1-800-97-bauman (1-800-972-2862) or 212-751-0011 brb@baumanrarebooks.com new york 535 Madison Avenue (Between 54th & 55th Streets) New York, NY 10022 800-972-2862 or 212-751-0011 Monday to Saturday, 10am to 6pm las vegas Grand Canal Shoppes, The Venetian | The Palazzo 3327 Las Vegas Blvd., South Suite 2856 Las Vegas, NV 89109 888-982-2862 or 702-948-1617 Sunday to Thursday, 10am to 11pm Friday and Saturday, 10am to Midnight philadelphia (by appointment) 1608 Walnut Street Philadelphia, PA 19103 215-546-6466 | (fax) 215-546-9064 Monday to Friday, 9am to 5pm All books are shipped on approval and are fully guaranteed. Any items may be returned within ten days for any reason (please notify us before returning). All reimbursements are limited to original purchase price. We accept all major credit cards. Shipping and insurance charges are additional. Packages will be shipped by UPS or Federal Express unless another carrier is requested. Next-day or second-day air service is available upon request. www . baumanrarebooks . com / blog twitter . com / baumanrarebooks facebook . com / baumanrarebooks 4 CONTENTS 77 32 SEPTEMBER 2014 2 17th - 19th Century Literature 26 Modern Literature 48 Science 62 Americana 110 History, Philosophy & Religion 62 204 129 Economics 134 Travel & Exploration 147 Music 154 Art, Architecture & Illustrated 169 Children’s Literature 176 Index 163 154 Front cover image: Fine oil on canvas portrait of Sir Edmund Spenser, circa late 18th-early 19th century, in lovely gilt frame measuring 32 by 38 inches. $25,000. 191 au t um n 2014 | 1 7 T H - 1 9 T H C E NTU R Y L I Te R ATU R E 2 17th - 19th Century Literature 3 au t um n 2014 | 1 7 T H - 1 9 T H C E NTU R Y L I Te R ATU R E samuel johnson “The Most Amazing, Enduring And Endearing One-Man Feat” 1. JOHNSON, Samuel. A Dictionary of the English Language. London, 1755. Two volumes bound as three. Thick folio (11 by 16-1/2 inches), contemporary full polished calf rebacked with original elaborately gilt-decorated spines laid down (Volumes I and II), custom slipcases. $48,000. “It may be called the best of all Dictionaries. There is in it a kind of architectural nobleness; it stands there like a great solid First edition of the first great dictionary of the English language, Johnson’s “audacious attempt to tame his unruly native tongue… combining huge erudition with a steely wit and remarkable clarity of thought” (Hitchings, 3). Examples of the Dictionary in contemporary bindings are most desirable, and copies like this one, bound in three volumes near the time of publication rather than in the common two, are exceptionally unusual. “Dr. Johnson performed with his Dictionary the most amazing, enduring and endearing one-man feat in the field of lexicography… The preface ranks square-built edifice, finished, among Johnson’s finest writings… It is the dictionary itself which justifies Noah Webster’s statement that Johnson’s writings had, in philology, the effect symmetrically complete: you which Newton’s discoveries had in mathematics” (PMM 201). Gathering 12Q bound in twice. Courtney & Smith, 54-55. Rothschild 1237. Grolier 100. judge that a true Builder did it.” Lowndes, 1217. Small armorial bookplates. Old pencil notations to Volume I endpapers. Scattered light foxing, minor worming to gutter of gatherings 8G—Thomas Carlyle 8Q and lower margin of second volume through gathering 11N, Volume II title page reinforced, with restoration to marginal tear, small restoration toward gutter of rear free endpaper, Volume III, contemporary calf very handsome, some corners repaired. An superb copy of this linguistic and literary landmark, splendid in contemporary bindings. au t um n 2014 | 1 7 T H - 1 9 T H C E NTU R Y L I Te R ATU R E 4 john keats “A Thing Of Beauty” 2. KEATS, John. Endymion: A Poetic Romance. London, 1818. Octavo, 20th-century full brown morocco gilt, custom full morocco pull-off case. $15,000. Rare first edition, first issue, of Keats’ first long poem and second published work, one of only three books he published in his lifetime, his own self-proclaimed “leap headlong into the sea,” and a work that contains one of the most quoted phrases in Western literature, “In Endymion, I leaped handsomely bound in full morocco-gilt. headlong into the Sea… “The allegory of this poem, representing the poet in pursuit of ideal perfection distracted from his quest I was never afraid of by human beauty, is autobiographical. So much that when Oscar Wilde wished to speak sentimentally of failure; for I would sooner Keats he called him Endymion” (Rosenbach 27:260). “If he had not written Endymion Keats’ fail than not be among poetic progress would almost certainly have been less astonishingly swift… [in the poem] he is saying the greatest.” –John Keats that the deepest happiness for mankind lies in the attempt to get in touch with the highest reality and that this may be achieved through the apprehension of the beautiful” (Ian Jack). Rare first issue. Without scarce four-page publisher’s catalogue bound at rear. MacGillivray A2. Ashler III:13. Title page owner signature and collection number. Fine condition. 5 au t um n 2014 | 1 7 T H - 1 9 T H C E NTU R Y L I Te R ATU R E andrew marvell “Had We But World Enough And Time”: First Edition Of Marvell’s Miscellaneous Poems, 1681, With First Printing Of “To His Coy Mistress” And Others 3. MARVELL, Andrew. Miscellaneous Poems. London, 1681. Small folio (8 by 12 inches), contemporary full brown sheep rebacked and recornered. $18,000. First and only collected edition of Marvell’s poetry to be published in his own century, containing the first printing of many poems, including “To His Coy Mistress,” with scarce engraved frontispiece portrait, a handsome wide-margined copy in contemporary boards. “Had we but world enough and time, This coyness, lady, were no crime. Very few of Marvell’s poems, and none of his important metaphysical We would sit down, and think which way poems, were published in his lifetime. Evidence exists that the woman who called herself “Mary Marvell” may only have been To walk, and pass our long love’s day. ” Marvell’s housekeeper, claiming to be his widow in order to inherit a small sum. This copy is complete with the rare engraved frontispiece portrait of Marvell, and Mary Marvell’s address “To The Reader,” both of which are often missing. This is, as in all known copies but two, the second issue, omitting the suppressed poems (pages 117-130) in praise of Cromwell. Pforzheimer 671. Wither to Prior 536. Wing M872. Hayward 126. Bookplates of highly renowned bibliophile Thomas Jefferson McKee, whose “knowledge and judgment of books were of a rare order” (New York Times). Interior generally fresh with engraved frontispiece portrait trimmed and mounted, occasional expert archival marginal repair, minor edge-wear to boards. An extremely good copy of this preeminent literary work. au t um n 2014 | 1 7 T H - 1 9 T H C E NTU R Y L I Te R ATU R E 6 7 au t um n 2014 | 1 7 T H - 1 9 T H C E NTU R Y L I Te R ATU R E william shakespeare “Incomparably The Most Important Work In The English Language”: The Second Folio Of Shakespeare, 1632 4. SHAKESPEARE. Mr. William Shakespeare’s Comedies, Histories, and Tragedies. Published according to the true Originall Copies. The Second Impression. London: Printed by Tho. Cotes, for Robert Allot, 1632. Folio (9-1/2 by 13 inches), mid 19th-century full crushed red levant morocco gilt rebacked with original spine laid down, custom clamshell box. $310,000. The extraordinarily rare 1632 Second Folio of Shakespeare’s plays, with engraved title page portrait of Shakespeare by Droeshout. A lovely first-issue copy, with ample margins, very handsomely bound in full morocco-gilt by Capé. It is believed there are fewer than 200 copies, many of which are incomplete or defective. This edition contains the first appearance of John Milton in print. The four folios of Shakespeare are the first four editions of Shakespeare’s collected plays. These were the only collected editions printed in the 17th century (a 1619 attempt at a collected edition in quarto form was never completed). The Second Folio, like the First Folio of 1623, contains 36 plays, all the plays that are considered to be wholly or in part by Shakespeare (with the exception of Pericles, which was added to the Third Folio edition of 1663). “The folios are incomparably the most important work in the English language” (W.A. Jackson, Pforzheimer Catalogue). The folios of Shakespeare, because of their incalculable impact on the language, thought and literature of our world, are the most desirable of all English language books, the prize of any collection. The Shakespeare Folios “have an aura of book magic about them. For a bibliophile it is a volume devoutly to be wished for and rarely attained; to a library it is a crowning jewel of a collection. Shakespeare, indeed, is a name to conjure with. No lengthy explanations are needed; he is simply the most distinguished author in the English language” (Legacies of Genius, 36). It may seem strange au t um n 2014 | 1 7 T H - 1 9 T H C E NTU R Y L I Te R ATU R E 8 that the first collected edition of Shakespeare’s works did not appear until seven years after his death, and that 17 of the 36 plays had never been published before (and might have been lost had the folios not been printed). But in the 17th century, plays were not routinely printed and often survived only in manuscript form. They were not considered “serious literature” in the sense that poetry was, so the publishing of a play was not likely to bring social prestige to the author, nor was there a great market for the published work; plays were to be performed and attended, not read. “Had Shakespeare not enjoyed the affection of his fellow actors his plays might not have survived. About three-fourths of the prolific output of playwrights in his lifetime has disappeared. But Shakespeare’s fellow actors, as a token of friendship to him, did us the great service of preserving the texts of his plays when they arranged publication of the “For a bibliophile it is a volume devoutly First Folio in 1623. What other playwright of that age was so well to be wished for and rarely attained; served by his fellows? The First Folio Shakespeare, the compilers exto a library it is a crowning jewel of a plained, was published not for profit but ‘only to keep the memory of so collection.” –Legacies of Genius worthy a friend and fellow alive as was our Shakespeare” (Boorstin). It is estimated that no more than 1000 copies of the Second Folio were printed, and it is believed less than 200 copies are still in existence today, many of which are incomplete or defective. The Second Folio corrects some textual errors of the First Folio and is notable for containing the first appearance of John Milton in print, his anonymous “Epitaph on the admirable Dramaticke Poet, W. Shakespeare,” composed about two years before the publication of the Second Folio while he was still a student at Cambridge. Second folio edition, first issue, Todd’s imprint setting “A,” State 1b. This copy is complete with original engraved portrait by Martin Droeshout, printed from the same plate as the portrait in the First Folio, in third state, as usual (Grolier, 6). Leaves A6, Cc2, n4, o1, q2-4 and pp6 slightly smaller (with repair to corner of pp6), possibly supplied from another copy of the same edition. Bookplate. “To the Reader” leaf neatly remargined along inner hinge, with a very few letters in facsimile; portrait title page mounted. Final three leaves expertly remargined, with portions of some borders and the occasional word or letter supplied in neat ink facsimile; cc1 with neatly repaired closed tear extending a few inches into The Winter’s Tale text but not affecting legibility; likewise bbb3 in Cymbeline; a very few other leaves throughout with neat marginal repairs, typically along lower edge and not reaching to border. Morocco-gilt binding expertly restored and quite lovely. A lovely complete copy with no facsimiles. 9 au t um n 2014 | 1 7 T H - 1 9 T H C E NTU R Y L I Te R ATU R E william shakespeare Important Second Appearance Of Shakespeare’s Collected Poems, 1709 5. SHAKESPEARE, William. A Collection of Poems, in Two Volumes. London, 1709. Two volumes in one, as issued. Small octavo, contemporary full brown calf rebacked with original spine laid down, custom clamshell box. $17,000. Scarce second appearance of Shakespeare’s collected poems, preceded only by the very rare 1640 edition; this is the first collection to include “Venus and Adonis” and “The Rape of Lucrece,” omitted in the 1640 edition. This volume, edited by Charles Gildon, also includes “The Passionate Pilgrim” and “Sonnets to Sundry Notes of Musick” and is essentially the first collected edition of Shakespeare’s longer poems. Tonson published Rowe’s edition of Shakespeare’s plays in 1709; he only had rights to the Fourth Folio plays, however, and Lintott evidently brought out this new edition of the poems to complement the plays. This copy is second issue, with the four sectional title pages bearing dates of 1609 (in contrast to the dates of 1630, 1632, 1599, and 1599 found in first-issue copies). Jaggard, 433-34. Ford, 37-39. With the gilt armorial stamp of the Society of Writers to the Signet, a prominent private society of Scottish lawyers. Contemporary owner signatures including to title page. Early ink annotation. Some foxing throughout; a bit of marginal dampstaining to lower corner of last several leaves. Corners rounded. A very good copy of this scarce edition. au t um n 2014 | 1 7 T H - 1 9 T H C E NTU R Y L I Te R ATU R E 10 william shakespeare “In Importance And Interest, This Edition Ranks Second Perhaps To The Folios” 6. SHAKESPEARE. The Works. Six volumes. WITH: The Works… Containing, Venus & Adonis. Tarquin & Lucrece And His Miscellany Poems. London, 1709, 1710. Seven volumes in all. Octavo, contemporary full paneled calf gilt, custom chemises and slipcases. $22,000. First issue of Rowe’s Shakespeare, the first octavo and first illustrated edition of Shakespeare’s works, including the first edition of the additional seventh volume containing the poems, published separately. This is the first collected edition of Shakespeare’s plays to appear after the four 17th-century folios. “In importance and interest, this edition ranks second perhaps to the editio princeps. It is the first manual text, the first to present a biography of the poet, the first to bear an editor’s name, the first to possess illustrations, and the first of an endless army of editions in octavo. The text is copied from the fourth folio of 1685... The attributed plays are found also in this version, and the plates are of no small value because of their contemporary costume” (Jaggard, 497). “In 1710 a supplementary volume [included in this set] was published containing the Poems… Though it is designated `Volume the Seventh’ it does not belong to the edition, though with it a set is esteemed the more” (Ford, 12). With 45 engraved plates and engraved portrait frontispiece repeated in Volumes II-VI (without frontispiece in Volume I, as often). First issue, with all of Ford’s first issue points. “Sets in contemporary binding in untouched state [as here] are scarce” (Ford, Shakespeare, 9). A few early owner signatures, notes. Contemporary full calf bindings sound with some age-wear; interiors generally clean with a few scattered light stains. A very good complete set of this rare and important edition. 11 7. SHAKESPEARE, William. The National Shakespeare. A Facsimile of the Text of the First Folio of 1623. Illustrated by Sir J. Noel Paton. London, 1888-89. Three volumes. Large folio, original full black morocco gilt. $4200. au t um n 2014 First edition, “special” issue, of this handsome illustrated typefacsimile of Shakespeare’s First Folio in three large volumes: Comedies, Histories and Tragedies. | The fabled First Folio of Shakespeare’s plays appeared in 1623. This “Special Edition” type-facsimile is beautifully printed on handmade paper, bound in publisher’s full morocco and illustrated with “India-proof impressions” of 20 splendid photoengraved plates by Sir Joseph Noel Paton, who was “immensely successful” as not only a painter but also a sculptor and poet (Houfe, 253). Each volume with frontispiece reproducing a known portrait of Shakespeare; “Histories” volume also contains a view of Holy Trinity Church in Stratford-upon-Avon. Prospectus bound into “Comedies” volume. Jaggard, 551. Occasional light foxing and soiling, bindings lovely, gilt bright. A very nearly fine copy of an impressive production. “The Art Of Living Well”: Boccaccio’s Decameron, The First English Translation, 1620 And 1625, Scarce In Contemporary Calf 8. BOCCACCIO, Giovanni. The Modell of Wit, Mirth, Eloquence and Conversation. Framed in Ten Dayes, of an Hundred Curious Pieces. BOUND WITH: The Decameron. London, 1625, 1620. Tall quarto, contemporary full blindstamped brown calf. $17,000. First complete translation into English of Boccaccio’s sparkling portrait of love, lust and exuberant life, even in the face of death— the second edition of Volume I and the first of Volume II, as virtually always. Scarce in contemporary calf. Boccaccio composed his masterpiece sometime between 1348 and 1352. “One of the really great books of the world, the model upon which is based the art of short-story writing” (Rosenbach 28:46). “This is the first complete translation of the Decameron into English. The woodcut vignettes which form the title are interspersed throughout the two volumes, one being given to each separate novel. A second edition of the first volume was issued in 1625 [here present]. The name of the translator is unknown” (Wither to Prior 250), although some authorities suggest John Florio, who prepared an important Italian-English dictionary in 1598 and who tutored Queen Anne in Italian. “No complimentary edition of the second volume was published, possibly because, when the present was called for, Jaggard was still able to supply copies of the first edition” (Pforzheimer 72). This is the first edition (1620) of Volume II (The Decameron) and the second edition (1625) of Volume I, as is usual. Volume I with early inked inscriptions, signatures to title page and rear blank, occasional early marginalia. Volume II with small marginal area of one leaf excised not affecting text (Volume II, Oo3). Interior generally fresh with light scattered foxing, one leaf with small open tear expertly restored, faint occasional marginal dampstaining, mild rubbing to boards. 1 7 T H - 1 9 T H C E NTU R Y L I Te R ATU R E “The Play’s The Thing”: Superb Type-Facsimile Of Shakespeare’s First Folio, Beautifully Bound And Illustrated chaucer “Foremost Among Writers In The English Language”: Important First Speght Edition Of Chaucer, 1598 9. CHAUCER. The Workes of our Antient and Learned English Poet, Geffrey Chaucer, newly Printed. London, 1598. Folio, contemporary full dark brown calf rebacked and recornered. $18,000. First edition of Chaucer to be edited by Thomas Speght, the sixth overall and last of the 16th century, and the most recent Chaucer edition available when Shakespeare was adapting Chaucer’s Troilus to his own Troilus and Cressida (1601-2). Featuring the first inclusion of two works, “Chaucer’s Dream” and “The Flower and the Leaf,” now considered apocryphal, along with the engraved title page and portrait of Chaucer. This edition, published at the height of the Elizabethan era, was an important influence on many of the day’s great writers. “The most remarkable feature of this edition is the glossary which was largely the editor’s production and was the main object of Francis Thynne’s Animadversions” (Pforzheimer). In this copy the scarce copper-engraved frontispiece portrait of Chaucer after Hoccleve—“the first engraved portrait of Chaucer” (Grolier, Langland to Wither 43)—has been supplied from another copy of the first edition, with a faint fold line horizontally through the center of the plate and bound in slightly askew. The tales preceded by the full-page woodcut of Chaucer’s arms, and woodcut-engraving of “The Knight.” First issue of this edition, according to STC. Ink stamp on verso of title page and final text leaf. Occasional faint embrowning. Repaired closed tear at lower edge of title page. Very good condition, a scarce volume. john donne John Donne is remembered as “one of the most celebrated preachers of his age as well as its greatest non-dramatic poet” (Drabble, 283). Of Donne’s estimated 180 sermons, 160 survive. “The sermons are not only rich in learning and curious lore: they are characteristically personal and powerful in their phrasing… At his most characteristic, [Donne] is the spokesman before God of a virile, unconquerable humanity (Norton Anthology, 918). With ornamental woodcut initials, head- and tailpieces. LXXX Sermons without engraved frontispiece portrait and first leaf, a blank. LXXX Sermons: STC 7038. Keynes 29. Grolier Club 62. Lowndes, 660. Fifty Sermons: Wing D1862. Keynes 30. Grolier Club 64. Lowndes, 660. Armorial bookplate of J.E.B. Mayor, librarian of St. John’s College, Cambridge (1864-66). Latin bookplate identifying the book as from the library of Francis Hutchinson (1871-1947), literary scholar and Church of England clergyman; a “modest, careful, sensitive scholar” of Caroline poetry, Hutchinson was, at his death, “at work on a life of John Donne” (DNB). Occasional pencil markings, marginalia (including notations of mispaginations in Fifty Sermons). Scattered light foxing, LXXX Sermons with closed tear to leaf [Q6], inner paper hinges reinforced, light age-wear to distinguished contemporary calf. A handsomely bound volume containing two rare and significant first editions, in excellent condition, with notable provenance. 1 7 T H - 1 9 T H C E NTU R Y L I Te R ATU R E Extremely rare first editions of the first two separately published collections of sermons by “the outstanding preacher of his day” and one of the greatest poets in the language (Baugh et al., 613), two landmarks of English literature and piety bound together in handsome contemporary calf. | 10. DONNE, John. LXXX Sermons Preached by that Learned and Reverend Divine, John Donne… BOUND WITH: Fifty Sermons… London, 1640, 1649. Two volumes bound as one. Thick folio (9 by 13-1/2 inches), contemporary full calf rebacked. $18,000. au t um n 2014 “The Spokesman Before God Of A Virile, Unconquerable Humanity”: Rare First Editions Of John Donne’s LXXX Sermons (1640) And Fifty Sermons (1649), Bound Together In Handsome Contemporary Calf 13 au t um n 2014 | 1 7 T H - 1 9 T H C E NTU R Y L I Te R ATU R E 14 The Novels Of Jane Austen, The Noted Winchester Edition 11. AUSTEN, Jane. The Novels. Edinburgh, 1911-12. Twelve volumes. Octavo, contemporary three-quarter brown morocco gilt. $7000. “Winchester edition” of Jane Austen’s works, in handsome contemporary bindings by Riviere & Son. Includes Pride and Prejudice, Sense and Sensibility, Emma, Northanger Abbey, Mansfield Park, Persuasion, Lady Susan (her epistolary novel), The Watsons (unfinished at her death) and her letters (edited by her nephew). With frontispiece portrait in Volume I. Austen’s novels were first published 1811-18. The Winchester edition of Austen’s novels was first published in 1898; this Edinburgh publication of the edition was the first to include Austen’s letters. Gilson E91. Fine condition. Blake’s Songs Of Innocence And Of Experience, First Letterpress Edition, 1839, Containing The Poem, “The Little Vagabond,” Seen In Very Few Copies 12. BLAKE, William. Songs of Innocence and of Experience. London, 1839. Octavo, original plum cloth recased, custom full morocco clamshell box. $14,000. First edition set in type of Blake’s most important poems, preceded only by the virtually unobtainable first issue which Blake himself hand-printed and hand-colored. This desirable copy with the “The little Vagabond” present on leaf F4 (seen in few copies). “In 1838 Mr. Charles Augustus Tulk lent Mr. Wilkinson a copy of Wm. Blake’s ‘Songs of Innocence and Experience,’ a copy of Blake’s own making… The delicacy and spiritual simplicity of the Songs made a deep impression on Garth Wilkinson… His brother William, holding no lower opinion came forward with the necessary funds... It is of much bibliographic interest, but the edition was probably a small one, and the book is now somewhat rare” (Keynes). Two versions of the first edition text are found: with and without the poem “The Little Vagabond” on leaf F4r. Most copies appear without the poem—this exceptional copy contains “The Little Vagabond.” Priority is now in dispute. Some believe that the poem was inadvertently omitted from the volume and was added later by the publisher. Others argue that the Church took offense at the poem (its being a criticism of the Church by a hungry child) and persuaded the publisher to remove it. Regardless, copies containing the poem are most rare and desirable. Booklabel of Pamela Lister, whose husband, Raymond, owned Golden Head Press. Bookplate. Owner signatures. Only a few scattered spots to interior, expert restoration to cloth. A desirable copy in near-fine condition. 13. BYRON. Don Juan. London, 1819-21; 1823-24. Six volumes. Quarto (Volume I), contemporary three-quarter brown calf gilt; octavo (Volumes II-VI), period-style three-quarter brown calf gilt. $17,000. First Edition Of Cooper’s Deerslayer 14. COOPER, James Fenimore. The Deerslayer: Or, the First War-Path. Philadelphia, 1841. Two volumes. Large 12mo, original purple muslin. $4800. First edition in original cloth of the last in Cooper’s series of Leatherstocking Tales. A superb copy. Although it was the last of Cooper’s five Leatherstocking Tales to be published, The Deerslayer is the first in the sequence’s internal chronology. “Cooper’s greatest work is undoubtedly found in the Leatherstocking Tales… His position as the first great American novelist is secure” (Fullerton, 67). Spiller & Blackburn 32. BAL 3895. Wright, American Fiction 1774-1850 589. Original cloth bindings in exceptional condition, with fragile paper spine labels intact and very legible, far nicer than typically found, interiors quite clean and bright. An outstanding copy in original cloth of this American classic. 1 7 T H - 1 9 T H C E NTU R Y L I Te R ATU R E “The War and Peace of English poetry, Don Juan contains… an epic sweep that moves from Spain, to the East, and to Russia before ending in England… At the same time that Byron’s broad canvas foretells the scope of the great 19th-century novels” (Eisler, 610). When Cantos I through V appeared, they did so without the name of either author or publisher on the title page. Publisher John Murray refused to print Byron’s dedicatory poem, which ridiculed English poet laureate Robert Southey, and Byron refused to put his name on a censored publication. Because of Byron’s change from his long-standing publisher Murray to John Hunt (brother of writer Leigh Hunt) midway through Don Juan, complete first-edition copies with all cantos are scarce. Bound without half titles, as often. Original drab paper wrappers and spine labels for Volume II and III (Cantos III-VIII) bound in at rear of those volumes. Two of the inserted engravings—which were originally issued in quarto format—have been trimmed close, affecting imprints (preceding the octavo Cantos III and VI). Small bookplates. Mild foxing and a bit of wear to contemporary binding of Volume I, with minor leather restoration along spine. Remaining volumes remarkably clean and fine. A desirable and scarce first edition set. | Scarce first editions of Byron’s great work—Cantos I-XVI complete in six volumes, with Volume I first issue, in quarto format—this copy extraillustrated with fine engraved frontispiece portrait of Byron and four copper-engraved plates from Finden’s 1835 Beauties of Byron inserted before Cantos I, II, III and VI. 15 au t um n 2014 “The War And Peace Of English Poetry”: Byron’s Masterpiece, Don Juan, 1819-24, Fine First Edition Of All Cantos au t um n 2014 | 1 7 T H - 1 9 T H C E NTU R Y L I Te R ATU R E 16 arthur conan doyle “It Is My Business To Know What Other People Don’t Know” 15. CONAN DOYLE, Arthur. The Adventures of Sherlock Holmes. WITH: The Memoirs of Sherlock Holmes. London, 1892, 1894. Two volumes. Octavo, original pictorial black- and gilt-stamped light blue and dark blue cloth, custom clamshell box. $17,000. First editions in book form of these classic stories starring literature’s most famous detective, illustrated by Sidney Paget. Sherlock Holmes first appeared in the novel A Study in Scarlet (1887), but his adventures in the Strand Magazine would bring both him and his creator, Arthur Conan Doyle, lasting fame. “The initial 12 tales were collected between covers as The Adventures of Sherlock Holmes, published in England and America in 1892; and 11 of the second 12… as The Memoirs of Sherlock Holmes, published in 1894. If any reader be prepared to name two other books that have given more innocent but solid pleasure, let him speak now— or hold his peace!” (Haycraft, 50). Adventures in first-issue binding, with blank street sign on front cover illustration. Green & Gibson A10a, A14a. DeWaal 520, 596. Scattered light foxing and soiling, particularly to Memoirs. Text blocks expertly reinforced. Original cloth exceptionally nice and fresh, with only minor rubbing, gilt bright; Adventures with small, stray ink mark to rear board. A beautiful set. 17 First Edition Of De Quincey’s Confessions Of An English Opium-Eater, 1822 au t um n 2014 16. DE QUINCEY, Thomas. Confessions of an English Opium-Eater. London, 1822. Small octavo, early 20th-century full green morocco gilt. $3000. | First edition of De Quincey’s autobiographical classic, handsomely bound by Riviere & Son. 1 7 T H - 1 9 T H C E NTU R Y L I Te R ATU R E De Quincey first published this account of his addiction to opium in the October and November 1821 issues of London Magazine; it drew much attention, and this first printing in book form appeared in 1822. With half title. Without the rare advertisement leaf. CBEL III: 649. Lowndes, 2026. A few faint stains to preliminaries, mild rubbing to joints, spine toned to brown. A handsome copy in very nearly fine condition. “Infused Much More Of The Simple Majesty… Than Pope”: Cowper’s Homer 17. HOMER. (COWPER, William, translator). Iliad and Odyssey of Homer, Translated into English Blank Verse, by W. Cowper. London, 1791. Two volumes. Large quarto, contemporary full tree calf rebacked with original spines laid down, custom cloth slipcase. $3200. First edition, “royal paper” copy, of William Cowper’s lauded translation, a large, wide-margined copy in handsome contemporary tree calf. Driven by his dissatisfaction with the ornament and sophistication of Pope’s translation, Cowper began a six-year struggle to render into lucid English the works of Homer. The result was a translation in blank verse, which held more closely and faithfully to the original Greek than any previously attempted. Per Rothschild, a “royal paper” copy in original boards measures 9-3/4 by 12-1/4 inches; the present royal paper copy is only slightly smaller, due to minor trimming of the uncut edges when bound. Rothschild 684. Trace of foxing to title pages and prelims; minor wear to original spines. A lovely large-paper copy. 18 1 7 T H - 1 9 T H C E NTU R Y L I Te R ATU R E Wonderful Emerson Letter: “I Am A Confirmed Tavern-Goer” 18. EMERSON, Ralph Waldo. Autograph Letter Signed. Concord, 2 March, Tuesday evening. Octavo, two pages on single folded sheet. $2800. Excellent Emerson autograph letter in which he declines an invitation, noting “I am a confirmed tavern-goer, to that extent, that I can seldom enter a private house where a public one is open.” Signed by Emerson. au t um n 2014 | Emerson’s letter is addressed to Mr. Fields, most likely of Ticknor and Fields, and reads: “My dear Sir, I have just received your note bringing me an unexpected by most hospitable invitation. You have my kindest thanks, but I am a confirmed tavern-goer, to that extent, that I can seldom enter a private house where a public one is open, and indeed had already declined other invitations for this coming Wednesday, when your kind note arrived. Yours with great regard, R. W. Emerson.” Tape hinge to blank side of sheet, very fine condition. “His Fame… Rests Securely Upon The Fact That He Had Something Of Importance To Say”: Magnificent Doves Press Deluxe Edition Of Emerson’s Essays: One Of Only 25 Copies Printed Entirely On Vellum 19. EMERSON, Ralph Waldo. Essays. With Preface by Thomas Carlyle. Hammersmith, 1906. Large octavo, original full limp vellum, contemporary chemise and half morocco slipcase. $14,000. Deluxe Doves Press edition of Emerson’s Essays, one of only 25 copies beautifully printed on vellum by the Doves Press (out of a total edition of 325 copies), in lovely publisher’s full vellum. Rare. The Doves Press was one of the greatest of the private presses., its books characterized by a stark simplicity, “dependent for their beauty almost entirely upon the clarity of the type, the excellence of the layout, and the perfection of the presswork” (Cave, 147). Originally published in 1841, “the Essays’ ethical inspiration and stimulation, their occasional startling phrase, their individualistic idealism, which stirred renascent Yankee New England to its depths, speaks with the same simple power and force in the midst of modern complexities” (Grolier American: 47). Owner signature of William Targ, the famed editor, publisher and bibliophile. At 22, Targ “opened his own bookshop and began to amass what would eventually become a collection of thousands of rare books and first editions.” Targ eventually became a powerful and beloved editor-in-chief at Putnam’s. On retiring in 1979 Targ founded the press Targ Editions, famed for its select publication of prized works, each “beautifully printed, by letter press, and bound, in limited editions signed by the authors” (New York Times). A fine copy. Rare. “She Was Doomed To Be Seen And Marked And Coveted By The Wrong Man” “One Of The Peaks Of English Fiction” 21. HARDY, Thomas. The Mayor of Casterbridge: The Life and Death of a Man of Character. London, 1886. Two volumes. Octavo, early 20thcentury three-quarter red morocco, custom slipcase. $5000. Extremely scarce first edition of this classic of 19th-century fiction, handsomely bound by Riviere. Written during Hardy’s greatest period of achievement as England’s foremost “regional novelist,” this classic of 19th-century English literature is “the first major poetic novel in English since Wuthering Heights, and it remains one of the peaks of English fiction… The Mayor is good enough to have recalled Lear to many” (Seymour-Smith, 323-25). With half titles; without publisher’s advertisements. Webb, 19-20. Purdy, 50-54. Bookplates. Occasional mild soiling to text; expert repair to rear joint of Volume II. An extremely good copy. 1 7 T H - 1 9 T H C E NTU R Y L I Te R ATU R E With his novel Tess, Hardy first came into conflict with the dictates of conventional Victorian morality. After two editors had asked Hardy for changes, he decided instead “not to offer the novel intact to the third editor [Arthur Locker of the Graphic] on his list… but to send it up with some chapters or parts of chapters cut out, and instead of destroying those to publish them, or much of them, elsewhere… till they could be put back in their places at the printing of the whole in volume form” (Seymour-Smith, 411). “The publication of the novel created a violent sensation. Some reviewers were deeply impressed, but most considered the work immoral, pessimistic, extremely disagreeable’” (Drabble, 972). Tess was serialized in the newspaper Graphic from July 4 through December 26, 1891 (Webb, 62), “deliberately modified to suit the delicacy of editors” (DNB). Volume I is first issue. Volume II and Volume II are the 1892 second issue (Purdy, 67-78). Webb, 24-27. Sadleir 1114. Evidence of bookplate removal. Interiors generally clean. Light rubbing to original cloth with light red staining to rear bottom outside corner of Volume II and the front bottom outside corner of Volume III. An extremely good copy. | First edition of Hardy’s greatest novel, mixed issues, in original cloth. “Unquestionably one of the greatest novels written in the last century… among the immortal works of English literature” (Rosenbach 29:188). au t um n 2014 20. HARDY, Thomas. Tess of the D’Urbervilles. A Pure Woman Faithfully Presented. London, 1891-92. Three volumes. Octavo, original gilt-stamped tan cloth. $8500. 19 au t um n 2014 | 1 7 T H - 1 9 T H C E NTU R Y L I Te R ATU R E 20 Victorian Limited Edition Of Thomas More’s Utopia, One Of 100 Copies On Special Paper 22. MORE, Thomas. Utopia: Written in Latine by Syr Thomas More, Knyght, and translated into Englyshe by Raphe Robynson… With copious Notes and a Biographical and Literary Introduction by the Rev. T.F. Dibdin. Boston, Lincolnshire, 1878. Octavo, mid 20th-century three-quarter brown morocco gilt. $3200. Limited edition of More’s classic work of social analysis and philosophy, inscribed by the publisher: “One hundred only on this paper, of which this is No. Twenty-eight, R. Roberts,” handsomely bound by Birdsall. “In Utopia More is concerned to show that the old, medieval institutes, if freed from abuse, are the best” (PMM 47). With engraved frontispiece portrait and double-page engraving of More’s family after drawings by Hans Holbein, as well as several engraved borders, initials, head- and tailpieces and vignettes. Title page printed in red and black. Original printed paper spine label affixed to the leaf following advertisements at rear. Utopia was first published in Latin in 1516; Raphe Robinson’s 1551 translation, used here, remained the only English translation until 1684. Dibdin’s annotated edition was first published in 1808. This edition issued in several limitations, including 575 numbered copies signed by publisher Roberts (100 on toned paper, as here, and 475 on white), 50 large-paper copies initialed by him and 30 large-paper copies signed by him. A fine copy, handsomely bound. Algernon Charles Swinburne’s Copy Of Poe’s Works 23. POE, Edgar Allan. The Works of Edgar Allan Poe, Edited by John H. Ingram. Edinburgh, 1874-75. Four volumes. Small octavo, 19th-century three-quarter red morocco gilt. $4000. Algernon Charles Swinburne’s copy, inscribed on the dedication leaf by the editor John H. Ingram: “To A.C. Swinburne with the Editor’s best wishes.” Tipped in is a slip of paper which reads (in Ingram’s hand): “From John H. Ingram, Howard House… London.” Handsomely bound by Stikeman. After his death, Poe’s reputation suffered under the willful misrepresentation of his literary executor, critic Rufus Griswold. In an attempt to set the record straight, Englishman “John Henry Ingram published the first significant life of Poe in 1874, which he expanded into two volumes in 1880… Ingram devoted years of his life to corresponding with everyone he could find who had known Poe or who had reliable information about him. Ingram also edited a four-volume edition of Poe’s works and wrote nearly 50 articles about him… Ingram’s biography… effected a turning point in Poe’s reputation” (Meyers, 264). Swinburne, certainly one of the more controversial and rebellious of the Victorian poets, was greatly influenced by Poe’s writings. Bookplates. Only light dampstaining to portrait. A fine copy with interesting provenance. This rare volume contains the splendid “first folio edition of Paradise Lost and the first to be illustrated” (Wither to Prior 607), with a copperplate engraved frontispiece of Milton by R. White that contains the first publication of Dryden’s lines on Milton, and 12 full-page copper-plate engravings. Paradise Lost first published in 1667; Paradise Regain’d and Samson Agonistes first published in 1671. From the library of renowned bibliophile Estelle Doheney, with her gilt morocco bookplate. Early owner signature. Lightly penciled bookseller notation. Gilt morocco bookplate. Text and plates generally fresh with lightest edge toning, frontispiece mounted on archival guard touching imprint but not image, rear leaf backed with rear endpaper, Paradise Lost title page with expert archival repair to small hole minimally affecting one letter, minor rubbing to boards. An excellent copy with fine impressions of plates. “Undeniably Opulent”: Boydell’s Large Illustrated Folio Edition Of Milton’s Poetical Works 25. MILTON, John. The Poetical Works. London, 1794-97. Three volumes. Large folio, contemporary full dark green straight-grain morocco gilt rebacked with original spines neatly laid down. $7500. Boydell’s sumptuous large folio edition of Milton’s Poetical Works, “the ne plus ultra of magnificent printing” (Dibdin), with three engraved portraits by William Gardiner, an engraved plate Milton and his Two Daughters after George Romney, and 28 intricate full-page engravings after Richard Westall. Engraver, print publisher, patron of the arts, Lord Mayor of London, John Boydell commissioned leading artists of the day to produce lavish editions of the greatest English writers. This splendid edition of Milton was among them. It is one of the first publications of William Bulmer’s London press for Boydell and is thought by many to be its finest production. “Undeniably opulent, but their straightforward, literate typography and printing spared them from ostentation… These superb books must have occupied proud places in the stately libraries of 18th-century manor houses” (Blumenthal, 31). Lowndes, 1556. Occasional foxing. Ornate contemporary morocco-gilt bindings with some expert restoration. A splendid production. 1 7 T H - 1 9 T H C E NTU R Y L I Te R ATU R E First folio edition and first illustrated edition of Paradise Lost, featuring 13 copper-engraved plates, including frontispiece portrait of Milton and 12 beautiful copper-engraved plates, one for each of the 12 books, the “crowning effort” of renowned publisher Tonson, rarely found together in one volume with the same year’s elegant folio edition of Paradise Regain’d and Samson Agonistes, from the library of famed bibliophile Estelle Doheny, in contemporary paneled calf. | 24. MILTON, John. Paradise Lost… Adorn’d with Sculptures. London. Printed by Miles Flesher, for Jacob Tonson, 1688. BOUND WITH: Paradise Regain’d… To which is added Samson Agonistes. London, 1688. One volume. Folio (10 by 15 inches), contemporary full paneled brown calf rebacked and recornered. $18,000. 21 au t um n 2014 First Folio Edition And First Illustrated Of Paradise Lost, 1688— “The Earliest Serious Effort To Illustrate An Important Work Of English Poetry”— In One Volume With The Same Year’s Folio Editions Of Paradise Regain’d And Samson Agonistes au t um n 2014 | 1 7 T H - 1 9 T H C E NTU R Y L I Te R ATU R E 22 oxford english dictionary “The Greatest Treasure-House Of Any Language In The World” 26. MURRAY, James, et al. (editors). A New English Dictionary on Historical Principles; Founded Mainly on the Materials Collected by The Philological Society. Oxford, 1888-1928. Ten volumes bound in twenty. Thick folio (11 by 13-1/2 inches), modern full navy morocco gilt. $18,000. First edition in book form of the famous Oxford English Dictionary—“a project of unprecedented historical and cultural importance” (New York Times)—very handsomely bound. “Unrivalled for its comprehensiveness and ease of consultation as well as for its reliability and scholarship” (PMM 371). “The essential feature of the Dictionary is its historical method, by which the meaning and form of the words are traced from their earliest appearance on the basis of an immense number of quotations, collected by more than 800 voluntary workers. The Dictionary contains a record of 414,825 words, whose history is illustrated by 1,827,306 quotations” (Drabble, 728). The first edition of the Dictionary was issued both in original parts and in book form. A fine copy of this important work. Superbly Bound Set Of Swinburne’s Works Thoreau’s Collected Works, Beautifully Bound 28. THOREAU, Henry David. The Writings. Boston and New York, 1906. Twenty volumes. Octavo, original three-quarter green morocco gilt. $4000. “Walden Edition” of Thoreau’s works, with four portraits of the author and several fine photogravure plates of places described by Thoreau. This collection includes all of Thoreau’s previously published books as well as his journals (from which almost all of his works were derived), essays, lectures, poems, letters, and a biographical sketch of the author by his fellow Transcendentalist, Emerson. The first Riverside edition, the first collected complete edition of Thoreau’s writings, was published in 1894. This edition is based upon that Riverside edition, but includes, for the first time, the complete Journals. A beautiful set in fine condition. 1 7 T H - 1 9 T H C E NTU R Y L I Te R ATU R E “Swinburne commanded an impressive variety of verse forms, writing in classical meters, composing burlesques, modern and mock-antique ballads, roundels… His influence on fellow aesthetes and a later generation of poets was considerable” (Drabble, 955). Title pages printed in red and black. The set includes Swinburne’s poems and ballads, tragedies, and The Age of Shakespeare. Fine condition. | Limited Large Paper Edition, one of only 110 numbered copies, magnificently bound in full crushed morocco with gilt and inlaid decorations. au t um n 2014 27. SWINBURNE, Algernon Charles. Works. London, 1904-08. Thirteen volumes. Octavo, contemporary full aqua crushed morocco gilt. $4500. 23 au t um n 2014 | 1 7 T H - 1 9 T H C E NTU R Y L I Te R ATU R E 24 First Edition Of Wordsworth’s Poems, Chiefly Of Early And Late Years, 1842, Inscribed By Him And Also Signed By Sir Henry Taylor 29. WORDSWORTH, William. Poems, Chiefly of Early and Late Years; including The Borderers, A Tragedy. London, 1842. Small octavo, original dark brown cloth rebacked with original spine laid down, custom half morocco clamshell box. $12,000. First edition, inscribed by the poet: “Inscribed by Wm. Wordsworth, Rydal, July 4th, 1842,” an association copy also signed by poet and playwright Sir Henry Taylor. Published the year before he was named Poet Laureate, Wordsworth’s last discrete book of verse includes “Guilt and Sorrow,” “Memorials of a Tour in Italy,” “Sonnets Upon the Punishment of Death” and his only play, the tragedy in verse The Borderers. Broughton 73. Also signed on the by George Taylor and his son Henry Taylor. The reclusive gentleman farmer George Taylor (1772-1851) possessed a strong literary bent. He was admired by Robert Southey. Poet and playwright Sir Henry Taylor (1800-86), George’s third son, is best known as the author of Philip Van Artevalde. He was on familiar terms with many of the day’s leading literary figures, including Samuel Rogers, Thomas Carlyle and Alfred Lord Tennyson. Well acquainted with John Stuart Mill and the Benthamites, he invited them to personal meetings with his two close friends, Southey and Wordsworth. He also likely introduced his relative Isabella Fenwick to Wordsworth around 1830; she became a close friend of both Wordsworth and his sister Dorothy, spending months at Rydal Mount as a guest. Interior generally clean, minor loss to laid-down original spine, light wear to corners and lower edges. A very good inscribed association copy. Beautifully Bound Set Of Wordsworth’s Poetical Works, With A Three-Page Signed Autograph Letter: “There Is So Much Coming And Going Of Strangers Among Us” 30. WORDSWORTH, William. The Complete Poetical Works of William Wordsworth. Boston and New York, 1910. Ten volumes. Octavo, contemporary three-quarter green morocco gilt. $8500. Limited edition, one of only 500 sets, illustrated with photogravures and hand-colored frontispieces, with a three-page autograph letter signed by Wordsworth. The letter, dated October 24, 1845 to a Mr. Parry, responding to his request for help, reads in part: “I received your letter when I was upon the point of setting off from my Brother-in-Law’s house… and I now sit down, not to thank you for it, or to express the deep sympathy which I feel in your sorrow… I have no knowledge of such a person as Rupert Trott [?] or of a place named Dale-Head… I have however written to the Clerk… begging him to make inquiries and to send me the result without delay, which I will immediately transmit to you and I hope in time… I remain, my dear Mr. Parry, with my high respects, faithfully yours, Wm. Wordsworth.’’ “Mr. Parry” is possibly Charles Henry Parry, a physician and author who accompanied Coleridge on his tour of the Harz Mountains and was also a friend of Southey. Spines uniformly toned to brown. A fine set. walt whitman au t um n 2014 Fascinating Page Of Walt Whitman Manuscript, Part Of An Essay Draft Discussing Genius And Ralph Waldo Emerson, Handsomely Framed With A Portrait 25 | One page of an autograph manuscript draft of an essay, discussing the “two signs of the very greatest genius in imaginative writers” and Whitman’s mentor, friend and rival Ralph Waldo Emerson, of whom he writes, “Both these [signs] are absent in Emerson.” Handsomely framed with a contemporary photographic portrait of the poet. The manuscript draft, with many cross-outs and corrections in both ink and blue pencil, is divided into three paragraphs. The first reads, in part: “that he has not the coarse animalism or the ecstatic religious sense/ But let us be thankful for what he has…” This paragraph seems to follow on the paragraph below, which has been entirely crossed-out with one line of a blue pencil, but is legible and is an apparent draft of the paragraph that follows it. The next paragraph reads, in part: “Two of the signs & elements of the last great genius dear to man — the element of religious ecstasy, and that of the teeming, procreative luxuriance of animalism, rich and hot, & rank — are absent in Emerson. He has the merit... has nothing to violate the standards of properly well-dressed ladies and gentlemen..” Whitman and Emerson of course are inextricably linked in the creation and success of Leaves of Grass. After attending Emerson’s 1842 lecture on “The Poet,” Whitman felt inspired and set out consciously to heed Emerson’s call to greatness. However, Whitman’s unilateral decision to print their correspon“Two of the signs & elements of dence in the 1856 second edition of Leaves of Grass, and also to put Emerson’s words on the spine in gilt angered Emerson, and the the last great genius dear to man— relationship cooled. The essay this fragment formed a part of was not published, but similar sentiments can be found in the essay the element of religious ecstasy, “Emerson’s Books, (The Shadow of Them)” in Specimen Days and and that of the teeming, procreative Collect. On the verso of the piece is a postcard on “J.H. Johnston & Son, Diamond Merchants and Jewelers” stationery dated April luxuriance of animalism, rich and hot, 14th, 1900, an autograph presentation inscription from J.H. Johnston that reads: “Rev. Arthur Copeland, Please accept this & rank—are absent in Emerson” MSS and Photo of Walt Whitman with loving regards of J.H. Johnston.” Fine condition. 1 7 T H - 1 9 T H C E NTU R Y L I Te R ATU R E 31. WHITMAN, Walt. Autograph manuscript draft page. No place, no date. One sheet of ruled paper, 8 by 10 inches; matted and framed with portrait, entire piece measures 14 by 22 inches. $13,500. Modern Literature au t um n 2014 | mo dern l it er at ure 26 raymond chandler “A Masterpiece Right Out Of The Gate” 32. CHANDLER, Raymond. The Big Sleep. New York, 1939. Octavo, original orange cloth, dust jacket. $19,000. First edition of Chandler’s first and most famous novel, with rarely found original dust jacket. The Big Sleep, Raymond Chandler’s first novel, “introduced a new kind of detective story, build on the hard-boiled foundation laid by Dashiell Hammett” (Johnson I:44). This was the novel that announced Chandler’s literary coming-of-age and defined the mythic status of his wise-cracking detective Philip Marlowe. Book fine; ink notation to front panel, slight chipping to spine ends, minor toning to spine of scarce unrestored near-fine dust jacket. 27 au t um n 2014 | m o d er n li t er a t u re f. scot t fitzgerald “For Pete Compton, A Wild Man If There Ever Was One”: F. Scott Fitzgerald’s First Book, This Side Of Paradise, Wonderfully Inscribed By Him One Day After Publication 33. FITZGERALD, F. Scott. This Side of Paradise. New York, 1920. Octavo, original green cloth, custom clamshell box. $63,000. First edition, first printing of Fitzgerald’s first novel, inscribed one day after publication: “For Pete Compton, A wild man if there ever was one — F. Scott Fitzgerald, Princeton, NJ, March 27th 1920.” Although the inscription was written just one day after the publication of This Side of Paradise, Fitzgerald’s first novel, he was already fast on his way to becoming the new literary sensation: the entire first printing of 3000 copies had already sold out (ultimately requiring two more printings in April alone). On March 30, 1920, Fitzgerald sent Zelda a telegram proposing that they should marry now: “Talked with John Palmer and Rosalind and we think best to get married Saturday noon we will be awfully nervous until it is over and would get no rest by waiting until Monday first edition of the book is sold out address Cottage until Thursday and Scribner’s after that Love Scott.”On April 3rd they were married at St. Patrick’s Cathedral in New York. First issue, with all points listed in Bruccoli. Early printings of this novel (April 1920) are exceedingly difficult to obtain. Without exceedingly scarce original dust jacket. Bruccoli A5.1.a. Bruccoli & Clark I:131. A bit of light dampstaining to top margin of some leaves, one-inch open tear to bottom margin of page 177. Some light spotting to original cloth. An exceptionally rare inscribed copy. au t um n 2014 | mo dern l it er at ure 28 t. s . eliot First Edition Of Eliot’s Prufrock, “The First Masterpiece Of ‘Modernism’ In English” 34. 40. ELIOT, T.S. Prufrock and Other Observations. London, 1917. 12mo, original stiff buff paper wrappers; pp. $17,000. Rare first edition of T.S. Eliot’s first book, one of only 500 copies printed, in the original fragile paper wrappers. “From the appearance of Eliot’s first volume, Prufrock and Other “Do I dare disturb the universe?” Observations in 1917, one may conveniently date the maturity of the 20th-century poetic revolution; for, in addition to the title poem, the book contained ‘Preludes’ and ‘Portrait of a Lady— both mature works; and the revolution had come of age” (Britannica). Gallup A1. Connolly, The Modern Movement 30a. Blindstamp on title page. One bracket and a few lines underlined in red and blue pen. Mild toning to text and wrappers as usual, light rubbing to wrappers. A lovely near-fine copy. 29 au t um n 2014 | m o d er n li t er a t u re william faulkner “William Faulkner At His Best”: Exceptionally Scarce Signed Limited First Edition Of Go Down, Moses, One Of Only 100 Copies 35. FAULKNER, William. Go Down, Moses and Other Stories. New York, 1942. Octavo, original three-quarter rose cloth, custom cloth clamshell box. $35,000. Signed limited first edition, one of only 100 copies signed by the author. The scarcest of all Faulkner signed limited editions, with the first book appearance of “The Bear.” Go Down, Moses “was a landmark volume for Faulkner… Here we have the Southern dilemma, and Faulkner has transformed it into the American” (Karl, 665-67). A contemporary review in the Boston Globe said of all the stories that they “represent William Faulkner at his best. Which is equivalent to saying the best we have.” Massey 448. Petersen A23.2a. A fine signed copy. “He is the greatest artist the South has produced.” —Ralph Ellison au t um n 2014 | mo dern l it er at ure 30 ian fleming “Whom Have You Been Sent Over To Kill Here, Mr. Bond?” 36. FLEMING, Ian. Live and Let Die. London, 1954. Octavo, original black paper boards, dust jacket. $30,000. Scarce first edition of Fleming’s second James Bond novel, “full of pace, incident and color” (Lycett, 238)—in which 007 investigates an underworld voodoo leader who is suspected of selling 17th century gold coins to finance Soviet spy operations in America—in the rare first-issue dust jacket. First-issue dust jacket without credit for jacket design and art. Biondi & Pickard, 41. Owner signature. Book fine, with only a couple of spots of foxing to fore edge of text block. Light wear to extremities and light scattered foxing to white rear panel of bright, unrestored dust jacket. An about-fine copy of an increasingly scarce early Bond title. 31 au t um n 2014 | m o d er n li t er a t u re ian fleming “He Must Play The Role… The Man Who Was Only A Silhouette” 37. FLEMING, Ian. Moonraker. London, 1955. Octavo, original black paper boards, dust jacket. $15,000. Scarce first edition of Fleming’s third novel, in which Bond must foil the attempt of a British industrialist to destroy London with a nuclear weapon, in first-issue dust jacket. “This title is extremely rare in fine condition” (Biondi & Pickard, 42). With “shoot” instead of “shoo” on page 10, penultimate line; sheets bulk at 19mm, indicating that this copy was part of a second impression on heavier paper, released simultaneously with the first impression, in the same binding (Gibert A3a (1.2). Book fine; light toning to spine and soiling to white back panel (as often) of bright, unrestored dust jacket with price-clipped front flap. A near-fine copy. 32 mo dern l it er at ure “Among His Most Beautiful Lyrics”: One Of Only 600 Copies Signed By T.S. Eliot 38. ELIOT, T.S. Ash-Wednesday. New York and London, 1930. Slim octavo, original blue cloth, slipcase. $3200. Signed limited first edition, one of 600 copies printed by the Curwen Press and signed by T.S. Eliot. au t um n 2014 | This poem was the first long poem Eliot wrote after his conversion to Anglicanism three years earlier. Drawing themes and imagery from Dante’s Purgatorio, it concentrates on the struggle for faith, hope, and transcendence. Gallup A15. A little rubbing to slipcase. A fine copy in scarce original slipcase. First Edition Of A Passage To India, Signed By E.M. Forster 39. FORSTER, E.M. A Passage to India. London, 1924. Octavo, original burgundy cloth, custom clamshell box. $4200. First trade edition, issued the same year as a limited edition, of E.M. Forster’s most famous novel, the last published in his lifetime, signed by him on the title page alongside his printed name with his inked line through it. Forster’s 1921 return trip to India “had the effect of releasing what was to be judged his masterpiece, A Passage to India” (DNB). Andre Gide praised Forster’s novel, his last published in his lifetime, as “a miracle of intelligence, tact, irony, prudence and ability” (Connolly, The Modern Movement 45). A “Limited Edition” of 200 copies was printed the same year, no priority established. With three pages of advertisements at rear; without scarce dust jacket. Kirkpatrick A10. Text with scattered foxing, slight rubbing to cloth. A scarce near-fine signed copy. “One of the saddest, keenest, most beautifully written ironic novels of the time” (New York Times) Initialed By James Joyce Fine James Joyce autograph note signed by Joyce with his initials, elegantly framed with a pensive half-length photograph of the author wearing his hat and carrying his walking stick. everywhere with me” (Salman Rushdie) Tales Told Of Shem And Shaun, One Of Only 100 Copies Signed By Joyce 41. JOYCE, James. Tales Told of Shem and Shaun: Three Fragments from Work in Progress. Paris, 1929. Small quarto, original printed paper wrappers, glassine, slipcase. $16,000. First edition, one of only 100 copies on vellum signed by Joyce on the half title and numbered on the colophon, out of a total edition of 650 copies. This is the second separately published portion (preceded by Anna Livia Plurabelle) of what was to become Finnegans Wake, containing the episodes “The Mookse and the Gripes,” “The Muddest Thick That Was Ever Heard Dump” and “The Ondt and the Gracehoper.” With introductory comments on Joyce’s method by C.K. Ogden, the inventor of Basic English and the co-author of The Meaning of Meaning. This copy housed in the slipcase with green suede paper customarily found with the 500 unsigned copies on Holland paper; “the slipcases of different colors were undoubtedly used interchangeably” (Slocum & Cahoon, 49). Slocum & Cahoon A36. Minor abrasion to rear free endpaper. Spine lightly toned. Scarce original glassine dust jacket with minor loss to spine ends and extremities. Original slipcase without ribbon pull, edges lightly toned to brown. A beautiful signed copy in about-fine condition. m o d er n li t er a t u re “Joyce is always in my mind, I carry him | Joyce’s note reads: “Best wishes from the four of us! Their requests will follow.” Fine condition. au t um n 2014 40. JOYCE, James. Autograph note signed with initials. No place, no date. $3100. 33 au t um n 2014 | mo dern l it er at ure 34 ernest hemingway “Happiness Is A Moveable Feast, I Know”: Extraordinary Hemingway Love Letter To Jigee Viertel, 1949 42. HEMINGWAY, Ernest. Typed letter signed as “Papa” with autograph closing and two autograph postscripts, each initialed “E.H.” Nice, December 28, 1949. One page, measuring 8-1/4 by 10-1/2 inches, matted and framed with portrait. Entire piece measures 23 by 17 inches. $16,500. Superb Hemingway love letter, typed with autograph additions, signed as “Papa” and twice signed as “E. H.” to Virginia “Jigee” Viertel. In December 1949 Ernest and Mary Hemingway vacationed in the South of France with A.E. Hotchner of Cosmopolitan, writer Peter Viertel and Viertel’s wife Virginia (“Jigee”). When the group reached Nice on December 27, the Viertels decided to return to Paris by train. Hotchner accompanied them, taking with him the final chapters of Across the River and into the Trees, which Jigee and Peter had helped edit, for publication in Cosmopolitan. Hotchner accidentally left the manuscript on the train, causing Hemingway great consternation, although it was eventually recovered. Written the day after the Viertel’s departure, Hemingway’s letter (all autograph portions in bold type) reads, in part: “Dear Jige: The day is no good and the fog is over all the roads so we stayed here... When you went away I missed you so badly... Happiness is a moveable feast, I know, but you are with good peoples and in a good town. This is no good letter except that it is from me to you and tells you no one could be happier than we were, given what we were give, and that I love you very much. Papa. Love to Peter. Love to ___(?) P.S. I feel like people feel after big amputations. E.H. Will write good long funny letter when have something funny to write about. E.H.” Fine condition. ernest hemingway 35 “To Guy With Much Affection, Ernest, Paris, Oct 28, 1933”: Exceedingly Rare Presentation/Association First Edition Of Hemingway’s Winner Take Nothing, Inscribed And Dated By Him In Paris The Day After Publication To Longtime Close Friend, Journalist Guy Hickok, With Bookseller Ticket Of Sylvia Beach’s Famed Paris Book Store, Shakespeare And Company au t um n 2014 43. HEMINGWAY, Ernest. Winner Take Nothing. New York, 1933. Octavo, original black cloth, dust jacket, custom box.$45,000. | This rare presentation first edition possesses a memorable association in Hemingway’s inscription—dated the day after publication—to Guy Hickok, “one of Hemingway’s closest friends in Paris” (Montgomery Review). Hemingway and Hickok, head of the Paris bureau of the Brooklyn Daily Eagle, loved “boxing, horse racing, human interest stories, and tall tales. Ernest never crossed the Seine without dropping in at the sign of the Eagle in the Boulevard de la Madeleine. Laughter was always skyrocketing through the smoke-filled rooms” (Baker, 87). In 1927 the two traveled across Italy, prompting Hemingway’s New Republic article, “Italy, 1927,” later titled “Che Ti Dice la Patria?” in Men Without Women. This rare copy also contains the bookseller ticket of Sylvia Beach’s Paris bookshop, Shakespeare and Company. “To the delight of Sylvia, Hemingway arrived in Paris the evening of 26 October [1933] and came to see her the next morning” (Fitch, 341). Winner Take Nothing secured Hemingway’s reputation as a master of short fiction. Six of this collection’s 14 stories made their first appearance here. Hanneman A12a. Grissom A.12.1.a. As Ernest Hemingway could be both reclusive and notoriously cold to admirers, this wonderful presentation/association first edition is most rare. Text fresh and clean, faintest foxing only to preliminaries, slight soiling, mild edge-wear to cloth; light edge-wear to scarce dust jacket. A very rare near-fine presentation first edition with an important association. m o d er n li t er a t u re First edition of Hemingway’s famed collection of short stories, an especially rare presentation/association copy warmly inscribed by Hemingway in Paris the day after publication to his close friend, journalist Guy Hickok: “To Guy with much affection, Ernest, Paris Oct 28, 1933.” Hemingway and Hickok, bureau chief of the Brooklyn Daily Eagle, shared a love of “boxing, horse racing, human interest stories, and tall tales. Ernest never crossed the Seine without dropping in at the sign of the Eagle” and their trip across in Italy in 1927 inspired Hemingway’s short story, “Che Ti Dice la Patria,” this rare copy also with the bookseller ticket of Sylvia Beach’s famed Paris bookshop, Shakespeare and Company, where Hemingway “had a chance to see the first copies of Winner Take Nothing, which had just been shipped over by Scribner’s. He liked the jacket, which he had not seen before” (My Brother, 139). au t um n 2014 | mo dern l it er at ure 36 ernest hemingway Hemingway’s Green Hills Of Africa, First Edition Inscribed By Hemingway In The Year Of Publication 44. HEMINGWAY, Ernest. Green Hills of Africa. New York, 1935. Octavo, original light green cloth, dust jacket.$24,000. First edition of this classic tale of big game hunting, inscribed by Hemingway in the year of publication: “To G. Nichols with best wishes, Ernest Hemingway. October 28, 1935.” With Scribner “A” on copyright page. Hanneman 13A. Interior fine, light fading to spine (as usual) and mild dampstaining to board edges. The green color used in the cloth was fugitive and is virtually always found faded or toned. Price-clipped dust jacket with only minor wear along top edge and is far less faded on spine than usually found. Inscription bold and clear. An extremely good copy, very desirable and scarce inscribed. 45. HEMINGWAY, Ernest. Typed letter signed. No date, circa 1940. One page, measuring 8-1/2 by 7-1/2 inches, matted and handsomely framed with two portraits. Entire piece measures 26 by 17-1/2 inches. $6000. This piece is accompanied by a typed note signed by Ralph E. Whitney, Art Editor of Cosmopolitan. The note is written to Harry Payne Burton, then editor-in-chief of Cosmopolitan, which had by then published five of Hemingway’s stories. Burton and Whitney had joined Hemingway in Havana to negotiate the publication of a new story, and during their stay, Hemingway left this letter (as is, on paper torn across the bottom) at their hotel. A scrawl beneath the signature is, Whitney explains, Hemingway’s telephone number in the hand of the hotel desk clerk. Fine condition, very handsomely framed. A splendid Hemingway letter discussing his greatest and most successful novel while still in progress. “Because The Only People For Me Are The Mad Ones” 46. KEROUAC, Jack. On the Road. New York, 1957. Octavo, original black cloth, dust jacket, custom clamshell box. $9500. First edition of Kerouac’s second and most important novel, “a physical and metaphysical journey across America,” very scarce in colorful dust jacket. “On the Road has become a classic of the Beat Movement with its stream-ofconsciousness depiction of the rejection of mainstream American values set in a physical and metaphysical journey across America” (Book in America, 136). Bruccoli & Clark I:217. Book fine; slight edge-wear, minor chipping to spin ends of scarce dust jacket. A handsome near-fine copy. m o d er n li t er a t u re The letter reads: “Dear Harry, I’m so sorry you have that damned sinus. Do so hope it is better now. Anyhow will be calling you around noon tomorrow. To get out here, get a taxi and tell him you want to go to San Francisco de Paula. Fare in town is $1.50 for the smaller cabs. From Nacional Hotel would be $2.00 I think. In San Francisco you turn to the left at the Post Office and come straight up a hill. Just ask for Finca Vigia [Hemingway’s house]. There are 14 Chapters here and there are 28 chapters completed in all. Am writing either two or three more and plan to publish in the fall. Am still working on the title. How do you like my Maria? She gets pretty wonderful later on. Just finished a hell of a chapter the day you came. Will be swell to see you. Ernest.” | Typed letter signed by Ernest Hemingway, discussing the unfinished For Whom the Bell Tolls, handsomely framed with two portraits of the author. 37 au t um n 2014 “Just Finished A Hell Of A Chapter… How Do You Like My Maria?”: Signed Hemingway Letter On Writing For Whom The Bell Tolls au t um n 2014 | mo dern l it er at ure 38 “It’s The Last Book Of Poems Of Mine—And Vers Libre”: Presentation Copy of D.H. Lawrence’s Nature Poems, Inscribed To His Friend, A Mexican Intellectual And Rare Book Dealer 47. LAWRENCE, D.H. Birds, Beasts and Flowers. New York, 1923. Octavo, modern black half morocco gilt. $4500. First edition, presentation copy, boldly inscribed and signed by Lawrence to his friend, the Mexican intellectual and rare book dealer Eduardo Rendon: “Eduardo Rendon from D.H. Lawrence.” This early book of Lawrence’s poetry features poems, many of an erotic nature, on natural subjects, including fruits, trees, flowers, animals, and birds. Lawrence also here includes his poetry of America. This presentation copy is inscribed by D.H. Lawrence to his friend, Eduardo Bolio Rendon, a Mexican national, educated in England, who made his living in rare books and manuscripts. Rendon and Lawrence were known to carry on intense debates about religion. Rendon was also a friend of Lawrence’s close friends, the Conways, who assisted Lawrence when he became ill in Mexico. In a 1925 letter cited in Moore, Intelligent Heart, 341-42, Lawrence writes to Rendon about sending this book: “Dear Rendon, Only today I got the copy of BirdsBeasts and Flowers which I ordered for you. Hope you’ll get it safely. It’s the last book of poems of mine—and vers libre. Some earlier ones are ‘enchaine’—I supposed that’s the opposite of ‘libre’—and since you’re and aesthete, probably you’d like those better. But I like these... D.H. Lawrence.” A fine inscribed presentation copy with most interesting provenance. “And His Soul Could Not Leave Her, Wherever She Was” 48. LAWRENCE, D.H. Sons and Lovers. London, 1913. Octavo, original blue cloth, custom half morocco clamshell box. $3200. First edition, first state, of Lawrence’s first important novel. Written during the “great blossoming of his genius,” Sons and Lovers is regarded as Lawrence’s first clear success. “Sons and Lovers is in many respects stylistically innovatory. It emphasizes moments of sharp personal conflict and intense psychological process which is conveyed in the charged, symbolic prose characteristic of Lawrence’s best work” (Stringer, 632). First state, with tipped-in title page. Publisher’s catalogue at rear. Connolly, The Modern Movement 21. Roberts A4. Light foxing mainly to edges only. A splendid about-fine copy. “No other writer with his imaginative standing has in our time written books that are so open to life.” (Alfred Kazin) “I Drew These Tides Of Men Into My Hands And Wrote My Will Across The Sky In Stars” “To Die Is Not A Difficult Thing, But To Die In Such Slow And Horrible Fashion Was Maddening” 50. LONDON, Jack. The Star Rover. New York, 1915. Octavo, original cloth, dust jacket, custom chemise and slipcase. $4000. First edition of London’s 18th novel, with color frontispiece. A lovely copy in the very scarce original dust jacket. The Star Rover “was a strange work, full of murky metaphysics, yet contained passages of great force and imaginative power; and its phantasmagoric quality suggested that [London] had inherited some the mystic tendencies of his parents—his mother’s Spiritualism, his presumed father’s guidance from the stars—and was finally putting them to use” (O’Connor, 363-64). First published serially in the Los Angeles Examiner and the American Sunday Monthly Magazine from February to October 1915. Preceded by two months by the English edition, titled The Jacket. Sisson, 83-84. Woodbridge 132. BAL 11963. Book fine and lovely. Some edge-wear, a few minor closed tears, and soiling to extremely good, scarce original dust jacket, with front panel bright. m o d er n li t er a t u re Seven Pillars’ blending of epic heroic adventure, psychological insight, and spiritual transformation make it the literary treasure that Lawrence intended it to be, deserving Winston Churchill’s praise as one of “the greatest books ever written in the English language” (Wilson 55). The writing and production of Seven Pillars of Wisdom is itself a legendary saga, filled with lost manuscripts, numerous drafts and redrafts, publishing crises, and financial difficulty. This edition reproduces all of the original photographic plates and portraits from sketches, facsimile pages from Lawrence texts and manuscripts, in-text line drawings, and folding maps, in two sets: one bound, along with 127 contemporary photographs of Lawrence, his colleagues, and the region that were not included in any edition of the work, and another set laid in loose in a portfolio. One of a total edition of 752, this is one of only 80 deluxe copies bound in full morocco. O’Brien A034a. Some minor soiling to slipcase. Fine condition. Scarce and desirable in the deluxe morocco binding. | Scarce and desirable limited reissue—the first ever— of the original 1922 text of Lawrence’s famous account of his legendary part in the Arab rebellion against the Ottoman Empire during World War I, published in an edition of only eight copies to distribute to friends for critical comments, with notes on the differences between this text and the final 1926 edition published for Lawrence’s subscribers. Includes fine reproductions of the color illustrations featured in the 1926 limited edition, as well as 127 contemporary photographs of Lawrence, his colleagues, and the region. One of only 80 deluxe sets bound in full morocco. au t um n 2014 49. LAWRENCE, T.E. Seven Pillars of Wisdom. A Triumph. The Complete 1922 Text. Fordingbridge, 1997. Two volumes text, two volumes illustrations; four volumes in all. Quarto, text volumes original full navy morocco, illustration volumes original half morocco and original linen portfolio, custom linen slipcase. $4800. 39 au t um n 2014 | mo dern l it er at ure 40 harper lee First Edition Of One Of The Rarest Of American Classics, Harper Lee’s To Kill A Mockingbird 51. LEE, Harper. To Kill a Mockingbird. Philadelphia and New York, 1960. Octavo, original half green cloth, dust jacket. $19,500. First edition, first printing, of Harper Lee’s masterpiece, in rare first-issue dust jacket. To Kill a Mockingbird became an immediate bestseller and won the 1961 Pulitzer Prize for Fiction. It is “an authentic and nostalgic story which in rare fashion at once puts together the tenderness and the tragedy of the South” (Jonathan Daniels). Book fine. Light wear to extremities of bright dust jacket with two small spots of abrasion to rear panel. An exceptionally nice unrestored copy. “Atticus, are we going to win it?” “No, honey.” “Then why—” “Simply because we were licked a hundred years before we started is no reason for us not to try to win,” Atticus said. “My Dear, I Don’t Give A Damn”: First Edition, Signed By Margaret Mitchell “I Have Been Saying The Same Thing… Over The Past Ten Years But Nobody… Takes The Trouble To Note What A Man Says But Only What A Man Lends His Name To”: Fine Arthur Miller Typed Letter Signed During The Height Of McCarthyism 53. MILLER, Arthur. Typed letter signed. No place, February 17, 1956. Quarto, one full page, matted and framed with portrait; entire piece measures 19-1/4 by 17 inches. $3500. Fine typed letter signed by the Pulitzer Prize-winning playwright and author of Death of a Salesman and The Crucible, to Brooks Atkinson at the New York Times regarding his views on Communism and a public mix-up with the anti-Soviet American Cultural Freedom Committee, written at the height of the Cold War and rampant McCarthyism. Four months later, on June 21, 1956, Miller would defy the House Committee on Un-American Activities by refusing to name suspected communists, earning himself a conviction for contempt of court that would later be reversed by the Supreme Court. Handsomely framed. Not long after writing this letter, on June 21, 1956, Miller defied McCarthy’s House Committee on Un-American Activities by refusing to name suspected communists, which earned himself a conviction for contempt of court that the Supreme Court would later overturn. His 1953 play The Crucible, ostensibly about the Salem Witch Trials, was a well-known allegory for the McCarthyism that was ruining careers and damaging lives. Fine condition. m o d er n li t er a t u re Said to be the fastest selling novel in the history of American publishing (50,000 copies in a single day), Gone with the Wind won Mitchell the Pulitzer Prize. Books of the Century, 111. Eicher 730. In Tall Cotton 125. Occasional scattered light foxing to interior, light rubbing to extremities of original cloth. Scarce original dust jacket extremely good with light wear to extremities and a one-inch closed tear to spine head, light soiling to spine, and tape residue to verso. Scarce signed. | First edition, first printing, of this American classic, in original dust jacket, signed by the author. au t um n 2014 52. MITCHELL, Margaret. Gone with the Wind. New York, 1936. Thick octavo, original gray cloth, dust jacket, custom clamshell box. $20,000. 41 au t um n 2014 | mo dern l it er at ure 42 henry roth A Great Rarity: Presentation/Association First Edition Of Call It Sleep, “One Of The Greatest Achievements Of American Writing This Century,” Inscribed By Henry Roth To Famed Editor William Targ, Credited With Ending Roth’s Writer’s Block, & To Roth’s Literary Agent, Roslyn Siegel Targ 54. ROTH, Henry. Call It Sleep. New York, 1934. Octavo, original light blue cloth, dust jacket. $48,500. First edition of Roth’s magnum opus, an exceedingly rare presentation/association copy inscribed on the title page by Roth to legendary Putnam’s editor-in-chief William Targ, “one of the greatest post-WWII editors” and his wife, Roslyn Siegel Targ, Roth’s literary agent: “For Roz and Bill Targ In cherished friendship Henry Roth.” William Targ, who considered Call It Sleep, The Great Gatsby and An American Tragedy—“the three great American novels of the 20th “No one has reproduced so century”—was praised by Roth for ending his 40-year writer’s block in publishing his long-awaited work, Nature’s First Green (1979), as the premiere edition of Targ’s private sensitively the terrors of press. We have encountered only one other presentation/association first edition of this novel, in beautiful, very scarce first-state dust jacket. family life in the imagination “One of the ‘greatest achievements of American writing this century” Henry Roth’s magisterial novel about David Schearl, a young Jewish immigrant in turn-of-the-century New York, is of a child caught between two hailed as the finest Jewish-American novel of the age (Parker and Kermode, 181). Henry Roth warmly inscribed this rare first edition to famed editor William Targ and his wife, Rosyln cultures.” —Leslie Fiedler Siegel Targ. Considered “one of the greatest post-World War II editors,” Targ was editor-inchief at Putnam’s in the 1960s, a time when Roth’s literary agent was Roslyn Siegel Targ. William Targ “considered Call It Sleep, along with The Great Gatsby and An American Tragedy, one of the three great American novels of the 20th century” (Kellman, Redemption, 241). Book fresh and uncut; lightest edge-wear, minor tape reinforcement to verso, a bit of expert restoration to spine head of rarely found dust jacket. An exceptional about-fine presentation copy with an especially memorable association. 43 au t um n 2014 | m o d er n li t er a t u re john steinbeck “Lush, Lyric… An Endorsement Of The Artistic Calling”: Lovely Copy Of Steinbeck’s Rare First Novel, Cup Of Gold, 1929 First Edition 55. STEINBECK, John. Cup of Gold. A Life of Henry Morgan, Buccaneer. With Occasional Reference to History. New York, 1929. Octavo, original yellow cloth, dust jacket. $23,000. First edition, first issue, of Steinbeck’s ambitious first novel, now extraordinarily scarce. An essential addition to any Steinbeck collection. “Written when Steinbeck was 27 years old and published in an edition of 2476 copies just two weeks before the stock market crashed, Cup of Gold is a historical romance about the life of the pirate Henry Morgan” (Valentine 1). Even more, however, it is a richly allegorical Grail quest, drawing inspiration from such varied sources as Arthurian legend, Greek mythology, Druid lore and old ghost stories. It also offers glimpses of Steinbeck’s sense of himself as a young man. Copies of this edition are exceedingly scarce. In fact, the copy inscribed by Steinbeck at San Jose University reads, “I wish I had a copy of this edition.” Top edge stained, no priority. Goldstone & Payne A1a. Salinas Public Library, 19. Book very nearly fine, with only a bit of faint spotting to cloth, text quite clean. Scarce original dust jacket with expert restoration to edges, particularly spine ends and corners. A lovely copy of an extremely scarce work. au t um n 2014 | mo dern l it er at ure 44 Thomas Pynchon’s First Novel 56. PYNCHON, Thomas. V. Philadelphia, 1963. Octavo, original lavender cloth, dust jacket. $4500. First edition of Pynchon’s first novel, in first-issue jacket. V.’s far-reaching scope and complexity established Pynchon as one of the most imaginative voices of the postwar era. “Inconclusive, gripping, confusing in outline but convincing in detail, V. is a blackly comic odyssey into the occult corners and bizarre anxieties of 20th-century Europe and America” (Parker, 403). First-issue dust jacket, without reviews on rear panel. Mead A1a. Only lightest edge-wear, tiny bit of tape repair to dust jacket verso. A scarce aboutfine copy. “A Work Of Art… Of Original And Therefore Strange Beauty”: Limited Edition Of Kew Gardens, Signed By Both Virginia Woolf And Her Sister, Vanessa Bell, One Of Only 500 Copies 57. WOOLF, Virginia. Kew Gardens. London, 1927. Quarto, original pictorial paper boards rebacked, custom chemise and slipcase. $8800. Scarce limited edition of this wonderful collaboration between Virginia Woolf and her sister, Vanessa Bell, one of only 500 copies, in original pictorial boards. Shortly after it first appeared in 1919, Kew Gardens was praised as “a work of art… of original and therefore strange beauty,” and quickly sold out two small editions (TLS). But that success did not come easily. “The printing of Kew Gardens caused more entries in Virginia’s letters and diaries than any other book handprinted by the Woolfs… [On June 9th, 1919 Virginia recorded in her diary:] ‘Nessa and I quarrelled as nearly as we ever do quarrel now over the get up of Kew Gardens, both type and woodcuts’“ (Rhein, 15-16). Out of that tension came “the boldest and most effective of their collaborations” (Spalding, 221).”Vanessa Bell’s collaboration with her sister was vital… Virginia Woolf’s adoration for her sister-muse… was the foundation of their extraordinary professional collaboration” (Goldman, Cambridge Introduction, 18). This scarce limited edition is distinguished by Vanessa Bell’s more elaborate page designs. Kirkpatrick A3. Woolmer 155. Willis 32. Interior fine, lightest edge-wear, faint soiling to original boards. An about-fine signed copy. 45 au t um n 2014 | m o d er n li t er a t u re kurt vonnegut “Nobody’s Been Near The Phonograph Since Last Night”: First Edition Of Vonnegut’s First Book, Player Piano, Inscribed By Him With A Large Self-Portrait Sketch 58. VONNEGUT, Kurt. Player Piano. New York, 1952. Octavo, original green paper boards, dust jacket.$9200. First edition, first printing, of Vonnegut’s scarce first book, inscribed: “For Frank Sparti, 37 years after publication—Kurt Vonnegut, April 12, 1989, Manhattan,” with a huge self-portrait sketch by Vonnegut. This important debut reveals “Vonnegut’s skill and originality in combining black humor, a sense of the absurd, and the devices of science-fantasy to produce unforgettable commentaries on our times and the future that awaits” (Vinson, 1416). First printing, with Scribner’s ‘A’ on the copyright page. Interior fine; light wear to extremities. Light toning to spine and light wear to extremities of bright dust jacket. A near-fine copy, exceptional with inscription and sketch. au t um n 2014 | mo dern l it er at ure 46 “A True Friend Stabs You In The Front” 59. WILDE, Oscar. Complete Works. Boston, circa 1910. Ten volumes. Octavo, contemporary three-quarter navy morocco gilt. $4500. “Authorized” edition, with frontispiece illustrations in each volume, handsomely bound. Includes The Picture of Dorian Gray, The Importance of Being Earnest, Salome, Lady Windermere’s Fan, An Ideal Husband, De Profundis, and other major works, along with his poems, essays, and critical reviews. Because of copyright issues, Dorian Gray was issued by New York publisher Bigelow, Brown & Company. Spines toned to brown. A few joints a bit tender. A handsome set. “A Personal Touch On The Fly-Leaf”: First Edition Of The Rose Tattoo, Inscribed And With Fingerprints By Tennessee Williams 60. WILLIAMS, Tennessee. The Rose Tattoo. New York: 1951. Octavo, original rose cloth, dust jacket. $6000. First edition of Williams’ Tony Award-winning play—his “celebration of the inebriate god,” boldly inscribed in the year of publication by Williams around blue ink fingerprints of his fingers and thumb: “‘a personal touch on the fly-leaf’ — to Lang from Tennessee. Key West. April 1951.” Williams wrote of his play, “The Rose Tattoo is the Dionysian element in human life… the lyric as well as the Bacchantic impulse… the transcendence of life over the instruments it uses… a celebration of the inebriate god” (Spoto, The Kindness of Strangers, 170). In his Memoirs he called it “my love-play to the world.” Williams wrote the play following his 1948 trip to Italy. Binding A, in rose cloth. Crandell A10.1.a. Book with only slight rubbing to edges, dust jacket with slight toning and light wear to extremities. A near-fine copy, uniquely inscribed by Williams. 47 au t um n 2014 | m o d er n li t er a t u re marlon brando Rare First Edition Of Williams’ Streetcar Named Desire, An Exceptional Association Copy With The Signatures And Inscriptions Of 12 Of The 13 Cast Members Of The Broadway Premiere, Including Marlon Brando, Jessica Tandy, Kim Hunter & Karl Malden 61. (BRANDO, Marlon; TANDY, Jessica; HUNTER, Kim; MALDEN, Karl) WILLIAMS, Tennessee. A Streetcar Named Desire. New York, 1947. Octavo, original pink paper boards, clamshell box. $20,000. First edition of Williams’ Pulitzer Prize-winning masterpiece, a rare association copy containing signatures and inscriptions of lead actors Marlon Brando, Jessica Tandy, Kim Hunter and Karl Malden, along with eight additional members of the Broadway cast: Gee Gee James, Peg Hillias, Edna Thomas, Richard Carlyle, Nick Dennis, Ann Dere, Richard Garrick, and Henry Barnard (replacing Vito Christi). Critically praised as “superb” and “fascinating,” Streetcar Named Desire brought Williams his second New York Drama Critics’ Circle Award—and a Pulitzer Prize. Williams himself considered this his best play (Devlin, 50). Elia Kazan directed the original production that opened in New Haven on October 30, 1947 before moving to Broadway on December 3. This exceptional association copy is inscribed on the half title above a taped photographic portrait of Brando, who starred as Stanley Kowalski: “To Elaine, Regards Marlon Brando,” with “To Elaine, Jessica Tandy,” who played Blanch DuBois. Title page verso with inscriptions and signatures: “Hi Toledo, Gee Gee James” (Negro Woman), “Only the best always, Edna Thomas” (Mexican Woman). “Karl Malden [Mitch] Thank you,” [signed] Nick Dennis (Pablo Gonzales), and “Best love, honey, Peg [Hillias]” (Eunice Hubbell). Cast page with inscribed, “Remember Ann Dere?” (Nurse), and the signatures of: Kim Hunter (Stella Kowalski), Dick Carlyle (Tamale Vendor), Richard Garrick (Doctor), and Henry Barnard (who replaced Vido Christi as A Young Collector). With Williams’ name in gold on the spine (scarcer than in white). Without original dust jacket. Crandell A5.I.a. Text fresh, only light edge-wear to bright boards. A rare inscribed about-fine association copy of this famed classic of the American theater. Science science charles darwin au t um n 2014 | 48 “The Most Important Single Work In Science”: First Edition Of Darwin’s Landmark On The Origin Of Species, The Copy Of Biologist Sir Charles Wyville Thomson 62. DARWIN, Charles. On the Origin of Species By Means of Natural Selection, Or the Preservation of Favoured Races in the Struggle For Life. London, 1859. Octavo, original green cloth, custom half morocco clamshell box. $160,000. Rare first edition of “certainly the most important biological book ever written” (Freeman, 73). Association copy from the library of biologist Charles Wyville Thomson, lead scientific officer on the Challenger expedition and a critic of Darwin’s views on natural selection.” This, the most important single work in science, brought man to his true place in nature” (Heralds of Science 199). With folding diagram and 32 pages of advertisements. Darwin wrote in his diary that the first edition was published on November 24, 1250 copies were printed, and all copies sold the first day. Darwin “was intent upon carrying Lyell’s demonstration of the uniformity of natural causes over into the organic world… In accomplishing this Darwin not only drew an entirely new picture of the workings of organic nature; he revolutionized our methods of thinking and our outlook on the natural order of things. The recognition that constant change is the order of the universe had been finally established and a vast step forward in the uniformity of nature had been taken” (PMM 344). With 32 pages of publisher’s advertisements dated June 1859 (Freeman’s third state of three). Freeman 373. The copy of naturalist Charles Wyville Thomson, with his bookplate. A marine zoologist, Thomson was the driving force behind the Challenger Expedition of 1872-76, for which he served as chief scientific officer. The 4-year expedition “founded the discipline of oceanography” (Conrad, 67) and the 40-volume publication of its findings are “without parallel in the history of scientific research” (Britannica). Thomson first crossed paths with Darwin in 1870, when he wrote to Darwin asking the eminent scientist to provide him with a recommendation for an academic position; even though they had never met, Darwin, impressed with Thomson’s work, gladly did, and Thomson was offered the position. After the Challenger Expedition, however, Thomson saw fit to criticize some of Darwin’s ideas in print, eliciting what Darwin’s son Francis called “the only instance in which [Darwin] wrote publicly with anything like severity.” In 1880, Darwin wrote a letter to the journal Nature that began: “I am sorry to find that Sir Wyville Thomson does not understand the principle of natural selection, as explained by Mr. Wallace and myself. If he had done so, he could not have written the following sentence in the Introduction to the Voyage of the Challenger:—’The character of the abyssal fauna refuses to give the least support to the theory which refers the evolution of species to extreme variation guided only by natural selection.’ This is a standard of criticism not uncommonly reached by theologians and metaphysicians, when they write on scientific subjects, but is something new as coming from a naturalist. Text fine, interior paper hinges with a bit of wear; original unrestored cloth in exceptional condition, with minor wear to spine extremities and a bit of bubbling to cloth on the back panel. An exceptionally clean, bright copy of this scientific landmark, with wonderful and significant provenance. “There is grandeur in this view of life, with its several powers, having been originally breathed into a few forms or into one; and that, whilst this planet has gone cycling on according to the fixed law of gravity, from so simple a beginning endless forms most beautiful and most wonderful have been, and are being, evolved.” 49 au t um n 2014 | s cie n ce au t um n 2014 | science 50 charles darwin “I Know Of No Quarter Of The World So Likely To Afford Important Discoveries In This Line… Mr Isaac Ought To Read Lyell’s Principles & Elements Of Geology… It Would Give Him Much Zest In His Pursuits”: Lengthy Early Autograph Seven-Page Letter Signed By Charles Darwin Discussing A Trove Of Australian Fossils, Mentioning The Platypus As Well As Lyell’s Principles And Elements Of Geology, A Formative Influence On Darwin And His Theory Of Evolution 63. DARWIN, Charles. Autograph letter signed. Down Bromley Kent, England, circa 1845. Two leaves of 7 by 8-1/2-inch stationery, each folded once for eight pages total, handwritten on seven. Mounted and framed with portrait and transcription. $37,500. Lengthy seven-page autograph letter signed by Charles Darwin to second cousin Edward Holland discussing a trove of fossils found in Australia, claiming that while he would like to see them, “I know nothing on the subject & am only a fossil Resurrectionist,” adding, “I know of no quarter of the world so likely to afford important discoveries in this line: for instance some single bone or skeleton might throw a surprising light on the relation of the ornithorhynchus [platypus] with the rest of creation,” and urging the discoverer of the fossils to read Lyell’s Principles and Elements of Geology, a scientific masterpiece known to have had tremendous influence on Darwin’s formation as a scientist and his formulation of the theory of evolution. 51 au t um n 2014 | s cie n ce The letter, penned entirely in Darwin’s hand, reads in part: “Down Bromley Kent, Tuesday/ My dear Holland, I am much obliged for your friendly note and interesting enclosure... The fossil bones discovered by Mr Isaac will probably prove exceedingly valuable, & I return with thanks the clear account of the district. I shall be curious to see them... Prof Owen has already worked at so many Australian fossils, that I have no doubt he will be glad to undertake their examination & description... Mr Isaac probably knows that heads especially with teeth are very much more valuable than any other bones.— I hope you will urge on him to make a large collection of several specimens of every shell small & large in the bed which he refers to, marking carefully the relative position of the bed to any bed with bones. The chronology, which must be judged of by shells, of the extinct Australian animals is very imperfectly known & a collection elucidating this point, would be of real interest... Mr Isaac ought to read Lyell’s Principles & Elements of Geology, if he has not already done so, it would give him much zest in his pursuits... C. Darwin”. While aboard the Beagle in 1831-36, Darwin read Lyell’s Principles and was profoundly influenced by it, later writing: “The science of geology is enormously indebted to Lyell—more… than to any other man who ever lived” (DNB). Darwin acknowledged that “I always feel as if my books came half out of Lyell’s brain” (PMM 344). Upon his return in 1836, Darwin met Lyell, who introduced him to anatomist Richard Owen, who undertook the classification of the fossil bones collected by Darwin on his trip, leading to the discovery of a number of extinct species. Darwin found the example of the platypus compelling when discussing his theory. Writing in On the Origin of Species, in likening the evolutionary process to a branching tree, Darwin observed: “From the first growth of the tree, many a limb and branch has decayed and dropped off; and these lost branches of various sizes may represent those whole orders, families, and genera which have now no living representatives, and which are known to us only from having been found in a fossil state. As we here and there see a thin straggling branch springing from a fork low down in a tree, and which by some chance has been favored and is still alive on its summit, so we occasionally see an animal like the Ornithorhynehus or Lepidosiren [Lungfish], which in some small degree connects by its affinities two large branches of life, and which as apparently been saved from fatal completion by having inhabited a protected station.” (119) Indeed, Darwin employs the platypus as an analytical example in at least five instances in his 1859 work. But while many presumed the platypus to be some sort of missing link between species, Darwin urged caution in using such superficial traits to classify different forms of life. Correspondent Edward Holland was Darwin’s second cousin. The discoverer of the fossils, “Mr. Isaac” was Frederick Neville Isaac, possibly a relative of Holland’s wife, Sophia Isaac. This letter has been published in Darwin’s Correspondence II: 373–4. Faint fold lines. Fine condition, handsomely framed. au t um n 2014 | science 52 Darwin Compliments A Fellow Naturalist: “A High Opinion Of His Abilities And Great Zeal For Natural Science”— 1879 Autograph Letter Signed By Darwin 64. DARWIN, Charles. Autograph Letter Signed. Kent, February 28, 1879. One page, octavo, matted and framed with portrait. Entire piece measures 16 by 14 inches. $8000. Scarce autograph letter signed by Charles Darwin regarding his contemporary English naturalist Edward Perceval Wright. Handsomely framed with a bust-length photographic portrait. Darwin’s letter reads: “I have read at different times several papers written by Professor E. Perceval Wright, and they have impressed me with a high opinion of his abilities and great zeal for natural science.” Edward Perceval Wright (1834– 1910) “spent almost his entire career within the University of Dublin. In 1857 he was appointed curator of the university museum and, the following year, lecturer in zoology… In 1867 he paid a six-month visit to the Seychelles and, although his collecting apparatus was lost by shipwreck on the way out, he brought back an important collection of plants and animals… Wright was a prolific author in zoology and botany” (ODNB). Fine condition. A scarce and desirable signed Darwin letter. Extremely Scarce First Official Reports On The Daguerreotype 65. (DAGUERRE, Louis and ARAGO, François). Comptes Rendus Hebdomadaires des Séances de l’Académie des Sciences. Paris, 1839. Two volumes. Thick quarto, original stiff beige wrappers, custom chemises and slipcase. $23,000. First editions of the first public announcement and the first detailed account of Daguerre’s revolutionary photographic invention as issued in the January & August 1839 reports by the French Academy of Sciences, both preceding Daguerre’s first published work on the daguerreotype. “The invention of the daguerreotype—the earliest photographic process—forever altered the way we see and understand our world” (Montebello, Metropolitan Museum of Art). Both Arago’s January 7, 1839 announcement (Volume VIII, pp. 4-7) and his extensive report of August 19, 1839 (Volume IX, pp. 250-67) precede publication of Daguerre’s own Historique et Description. The quarto first printing of Arago’s August 19 report issued coincident with small 34-page octavo pamphlet containing the same text, no priority established (Wood, 13). Text in French. Gernsheim, 230-245. From the major photography collection of musician Graham Nash, with his signed bookplates tipped in. Text quite fresh with only light occasional dampstaining at edges. Two fine large volumes, scarce uncut in original wrappers, with a distinctive association. 53 au t um n 2014 | s cie n ce albert einstein Inscribed By Einstein In The Year Of Publication, The World As I See It, 1934, Einstein On Pacifism, Judaism, Modern Science 66. EINSTEIN, Albert. The World as I See It. New York: Friede, 1934. Octavo, original brown paper boards, dust jacket. $18,500. First edition in English of Einstein’s first work for the general reader, inscribed in the year of publication by him, “To Robert Gries, A. Einstein, 1934.” Robert Gries was the son of Rabbi Moses Gries, a frequent correspondent of Einstein and ”one of the strongest men in the Jewish ministry in America… He was a pioneer of an open temple” (New York Times). The World as I See It is comprised of five sections, with Einstein’s thoughts and personal philosophy on such issues as pacifism, Judaism, the German question and modern science. The 1935 first English edition was preceded by the first edition, published in Amsterdam as Mein Weltbild in 1934, and this first edition in English, published in New York that same year. The dust jacket is seen printed on both yellow (as here) and orange paper. Recipient Robert Hays Gries was the son of Rabbi Moses Gries, who is “regarded as one of the strongest men in the Jewish ministry in America… He was a pioneer of an open temple” (New York Times). In 1892 Rabbi Gries began serving as rabbi to Cleveland’s Tifereth Israel Congregation. In addition to his many years of spiritual leadership there, Gries also served as a member of the Hebrew Union College Board of Governors and was on the Executive Committee of the American Jewish Relief Committee He retired the year before his death in 1918. In 1936 Robert Gries, who was himself a prominent civic and business leader, “helped form the Cleveland Rams. In 1945 Gries teamed with Arthur McBride to form the Cleveland Browns, serving as vice president and director” (Encyclopedia of Cleveland History). Gift bookplate: “In the Name of Rabbi Moses J. and Frances Hays Gries.” Library inkstamp to title page. Trace of bookplate removal to verso of front free endpaper. Interior fine, small closed tear to spine head; scarce dust jacket with a bit of shallow chipping, toning to spine, closed tear to rear panel. An extremely good copy. au t um n 2014 | science 54 albert einstein Exceptional Signed Einstein Letter Discussing “The ‘Nature Of Ultimate Reality’ Whatever This May Mean” 67. EINSTEIN, Albert. Typed Letter Signed. New Jersey, June 11, 1943. Matted and framed with portrait, entire piece measures 22 by 29 inches. $15,000. “If Huxley speaks of ‘blind forces’ what means ‘blind’? ‘Blind’ means Typed letter, signed “A. Einstein.” In this letter Einstein replies to John H. S. Lee, writer of a rebuttal of Julian Huxley’s The Biologist Looks at Man, on the implications of evolution and psychoanalysis. Julian Huxley argued that Darwin’s work, along with Freud’s elucidation of the unconscious, obviated the need for a God, concluding that man is the result of the actions of “blind forces.” Lee, in his 10-page response (included with this with something else.” Einstein letter) argues for a more “religious” explanation. Einstein, with humor and insight, replies: “My dear Mr. Lee: Your answer to Huxley’s opinions seems to me intelligent and eloquent. If asked: Who is right? I am reminded of a story about a Judge: The lawyer for the plaintiff spoke convincingly and the Judge said: ‘It seems you are right!’ The lawyer for the defendant was also very convincing and the Judge said: ‘You seem to be right also!’ When someone in the audience remarked: ‘But Judge, they cannot both be right!’ the Judge answered: ‘You are right too!’ If Huxley speaks of ‘blind forces,’ what means ‘blind’? ‘Blind’ means he does not see any connections with something else. Is this not an abuse of the word ‘blind’?” Fine condition. he does not see any connections 55 au t um n 2014 | s cie n ce albert einstein His “One And Only Intellectual Biography”: Signed By Einstein 68. EINSTEIN, Albert. Albert Einstein: Philosopher-Scientist. Evanston, Illinois, 1949. Octavo, original brown cloth, slipcase, custom clamshell box. $13,500. First edition, one of 760 copies signed and dated by Einstein. “The most incomprehensible thing about the world is that it is comprehensible.” —Einstein “The greatest physicist of the 20th century” (PMM 408). This impressive volume offers an excellent study of Einstein’s life as well as of his scientific and philosophic thought. Included are Einstein’s autobiographical notes in German and English; 24 descriptive and critical essays on Einstein’s work (contributors include Wolfgang Pauli, Louis de Broglie, Max Born, Kurt Gödel and Niels Bohr), together with Einstein’s responses; and a bibliography of his writings and index. Illustrated with frontispiece, photographic portraits, and plates. A fine copy. First Separate Edition Of Einstein And Rosen’s The Particle Problem In The General Theory Of Relativity, 1935, Introducing The Einstein-Rosen Bridge Better Known As A Wormhole 69. EINSTEIN, Albert and ROSEN, Nathan. The Particle Problem in the General Theory of Relativity. OFFPRINTED FROM: The Physical Review, Volume 48, Number 1, pp. 73-77. No place, 1935. Quarto, staple-bound as issued, original green paper wrappers, custom clamshell box. $4500. First separate edition of Einstein and Rosen’s The Particle Problem in the General Theory of Relativity, offprinted from Volume 48 of the Physical Review, the first work to discuss the Einstein-Rosen Bridge, commonly known today as a wormhole, in original wrappers. “The subject of ‘The Particle Problem in the General Theory of Relativity’ was the Einstein-Rosen Bridge, known today as the ‘wormhole’ solution of general relativity... The wormhole is a mathematical portal in space-time, allowing a space traveler to move more or less instantaneously through the universe and come out in a distant part of it, or into another universe” (Moffat, Einstein Wrote Back: My Life in Physics). Faint pencil underline under “Einstein” on front wrapper. A few slight creases, mild toning to wrappers. Near-fine condition. Silent Spring, Signed By Rachel Carson 70. CARSON, Rachel. Silent Spring. Boston, 1962. Octavo, original green cloth, dust jacket. $3800. First edition of Rachel Carson’s pioneering work in environmental pollution, signed by Carson, in scarce dust jacket. “The first work to address the larger issues of environmental pollution” (The Book in America, 133). “Even if she had not inspired a generation of activists, Carson would prevail as one of the greatest nature writers in American letters” (Mattheissen, Time). Lightest edge-wear to original dust jacket. An about-fine signed copy. “One of the landmark books of the 20th century” (Natural Resources Defense Council) galileo / kepler “Contains Some Of The Most Important Discoveries In Scientific Literature” (PMM) 71. (GALILEI, Galileo) (KEPLER, Johannes) GASSENDI, Pierre. Institutio Astronomica. London, 1653. Three works in one, as issued. Small octavo, contemporary full dark brown speckled calf rebacked. $9500. Second edition of the first appearance in England of Galileo’s most important work, Sidereus Nuncius (“The Sidereal Messenger”), the first of Galileo’s works to be printed in England (issued the same year as the first edition), with four fine woodcut plates of constellations on black backgrounds, as well as numerous woodcut in-text illustrations and diagrams. This is the fourth edition overall of Galileo’s Sidereus Nuncius, and the third overall of Kepler’s Dioptrics. Galileo’s The Sidereal Messenger (Sidereus Nuncius) was the first treatise to detail astronomical observations made through a telescope. Galileo presented the groundbreaking hypothesis that the moon’s surface was, in fact, bumpy and cratered. The work also discusses the discovery of the four moons of Jupiter, or the Galilean Moons. The preface to Kepler’s Dioptrics—present here—contained a continuation of The Sidereal Messenger in the form of letters by Galileo about his discoveries since the publication of his earlier work as well as Kepler’s remarks on those discoveries. Gassendi’s important treatise, which constitutes more than one half of this volume, is in itself one of the best books on astronomy at the time. The Sidereal Messenger was originally published in 1610 in Venice, and again that same year in Frankfurt; Kepler’s Dioptrics was first published in 1611. Gassendi’s treatise, Institutio Astronomica, first appeared in Paris in 1647. This is a variant of the 1653 second edition, with a slightly different imprint. Text in Latin. Wing G291A. Without pastedown endpapers. Minor rubbing to corners. A fine and crisp copy, most desirable in contemporary calf covers. au t um n 2014 | science 58 benjamin franklin Franklin On The Colonies, The Stamp Act, Wealth, Weather And Scientific Experiments: The Only Edition Of His Political Writings Printed During His Lifetime And With His Consent, 1779, With Many Pieces Appearing Here For The First Time 72. FRANKLIN, Benjamin. Political, Miscellaneous, and Philosophical Pieces. London, 1779. Octavo, contemporary full polished brown calf rebacked with original spine laid down, original endpapers retained. $12,500. First edition, octavo issue, of this major collection of Franklin’s writings, many printed here for the first time, containing his powerful testimony before Parliament in 1766, in which his eloquent answers to questions about the Stamp Act and other incendiary measures made Franklin “the foremost spokesman for the American cause,” printed with “substantially the same setting of type” as quarto issue, especially scarce in contemporary calf boards. Complete with frontispiece portrait of Franklin. This important work “is the only edition of Franklin’s writings (other than his scientific), which was printed during his life time; was done with Franklin’s knowledge and consent, and contains an ‘errata’ [Addenda & Corrigenda] made by him for it” (Ford 342). Edited by his close friend Benjamin Vaughan and published in London while Franklin was serving as America’s ambassador, this seminal collection contains many of his writings on the rebellious American colonies and incendiary British measures such as the Stamp Act. In addition to these and other pivotal writings— including pieces on the “Way to Wealth,” language, scientific experiments and observations on the Aurora Borealis, this volume offers first printings of many philosophical pieces that, the editor notes, “are not elsewhere extant in print.” Octavo issue, printed by the same publishers the same year as the quarto and “from substantially the same setting of type” (Adams 79-38b). Franklin’s famous epitaph is printed prior to a lengthy appendix, an index, and Franklin’s Addenda and Corrigenda. With a frontispiece portrait of the aged Franklin, three scientific plates (one folding), and folding table of a “reformed” spelling convention. Ford 342. Howes F330. Sabin 25565. Text and plates fresh with only light scattered foxing, small expertly repaired marginal loss to corner of one leaf not affecting text (531), minor rubbing to boards. A scarce extremely good copy. 59 “America’s First Great Scientific Contribution”: First Complete Edition Of Franklin’s Illustrated Experiments And Observations On Electricity, 1769, With The Ownership Signature Of Franklin’s Friend Hugh Roberts, Prominent Philadelphia Quaker au t um n 2014 First complete edition of “the most important scientific book of 18th-century America” and “America’s first great scientific contribution” (PMM), with seven engraved plates (two folding), association copy with the ownership signature of Hugh Roberts, close Franklin friend and lifelong correspondent. This first complete edition is the fourth edition of the original work; the earlier editions, each issued in three parts as separately published pamphlets usually bound together, were carelessly published. Franklin edited this new one-volume edition himself, significantly revising the text, adding for the first time a number of his own philosophical letters and papers, introducing footnotes, correcting errors, and adding an index. “Franklin’s most important scientific publication,” Experiments and Observations contains detailed accounts of the founding father’s crucial kite and key experiment, his work with Leiden jars, lightning rods and charged clouds (Norman 830). With the contemporary owner signature on title page of Philadelphia Quaker Hugh Roberts, a close friend of Franklin and life-long correspondent. Roberts, the son of Philadelphia mayor Edward Roberts and brother-in-law of physician Thomas Bond, shared with Franklin’s humanitarian and intellectual interests; in addition to being a member of Franklin’s famous self- and community-improvement club “The Junto,” he was also involved with the Library Company, the Union Fire Company and the Pennsylvania Hospital, all with strong Franklin associations. He was one of a select group of friends who purchased very early versions of the Franklin stove. Amidst the uproar over the Stamp Act, Franklin wrote Roberts from London thanking him for his “steady, continued Friendship”; later Franklin would warmly note that “We loved and still love one another; we are grown Gray together, and yet it is too early to Part” (Writings IV: 386-7). Roberts’ correspondence with Franklin continued until Roberts’ death in 1786. Howes F320. Sabin 25506. Ford 307. Scattered light foxing to plates and text, evidence of paper clip on half title; minor expert restoration to spine extremities of handsome contemporary calf. An extraordinary association copy. s cie n ce 73. FRANKLIN, Benjamin. Experiments and Observations on Electricity, Made at Philadelphia. London, 1769. Quarto, contemporary full brown calf gilt. $36,000. | benjamin franklin isa ac new ton science 1704 First Edition Of Newton’s Opticks, “One Of The Supreme Productions Of The Human Mind” And “One Of The Two Pillars Of Newton’s Imperishable Reputation In Science” | 74. (NEWTON, Isaac). Opticks: Or, a Treatise of the Reflections, Refractions, Inflexions and Colours of Light. London, 1704. Quarto, contemporary full brown paneled calf rebacked. $85,000. au t um n 2014 60 First edition, first issue, of Newton’s famous treatise on light and the spectrum, “one of the supreme productions of the human mind” (Andrade), with 19 copper-engraved folding plates. Also contains the first printing of Newton’s two treatises on curvilinear figures (in Latin), “intended to assert Newton’s “Newton’s masterpiece of priority to the discovery of the calculus over Leibniz” (Dibner 148). Handsome in contemporary calf, from the library of William A. Cole, distinguished collector experimental physics.” and bibliographer. Encyclopaedia Britannica “The import of the Opticks virtually equaled that of the Principia. Indeed, it may have exceeded it, for the Opticks, written in prose rather than geometry, was accessible to a wide audience as the Principia was not. Through the eighteenth century, it dominated the science of optics with almost tyrannical authority… the work remains permanently one of the two pillars of Newton’s imperishable reputation in science” (Richard Westfall). “Unlike most of Newton’s works, Opticks was originally published in English… The work summarized [33 years of] Newton’s discoveries and theories concerning light and color” (Norman 1588). “Nor would the author be confined... The range of topics touched upon by Newton included questions of gravitation, metabolism and digestion, sensation, the circulation of blood, The Creation and the Great Flood, moral philosophy, the inductive method, and the vivid images haunting the dreams of madmen” (Christianson, In the Presence of the Creator, 445). Bookplates, including that of William A. Cole, distinguished collector and bibliographer of chemistry, author of Chemical Literature, 1700-1860. Text and plates generally clean, leaf A2 with repaired closed tear, not affecting legibility, repair to corner of leaf Eee, not affecting text, corners gently bumped. A handsome, near-fine copy in finely rebacked contemporary calf, with scientific provenance. 61 The Discovery Of Periodic Law, First Edition In English Of Mendeleev’s Principles Of Chemistry, 1891 “The Greatest Work In The History Of Science”: Newton’s Principia Mathematica, 1726, The Last Published During Newton’s Life 76. NEWTON, Isaac. Philosophiae Naturalis Principia Mathematica. London, 1726. Quarto, contemporary full crimson morocco-gilt covers laid down over later crimson morocco. $16,500. Third edition of Newton’s Principia, the last edition to be published during Newton’s life, with his final revisions. From the library of renowned 19th-century mathematician Sir John Leslie. “The Principia is generally described as the greatest work in the history of science. Copernicus, Galileo and Kepler had certainly shown the way; but where they described the phenomena they observed, Newton explained the underlying universal laws… [F]or the first time a single mathematical law could explain the motion of objects on earth as well as the phenomena of the heavens. It was this grand conception that produced a general revolution in human thought, equaled perhaps only by that following Darwin’s Origin of Species” (PMM 161). This, the definitive edition, edited by Henry Pemberton, contains a new preface by Newton and many significant alterations and additions, particularly regarding the scholium of fluxions, the moon’s modes, and Halley’s verses. The third edition has formed the basis of all subsequent editions. Without engraved frontispiece portrait of Newton. Text in Latin. Gray 9. From the library of Sir John Leslie (1766-1832), noted mathematician and natural philosopher best known for his studies of heat radiation, with inscription to that effect on the front flyleaf dated 1833. Interior clean and fine. An outstanding association copy of this early and important edition of Newton’s landmark work. s cie n ce Mendeleev, already a renowned chemist, was appointed the chair of the chemistry department at the University of St. Petersburg in 1867. Unable to find a proper text for his students, he decided to write his own. “He derived his basic plan for his book from Gerhardt’s theory of types, whereby elements were grouped by valence in relation to hydrogen… Mendeleev’s work towards [Principles of Chemistry] led him to the periodic law, which he formulated in March 1869: ‘Elements placed according to the value of their atomic weights present a clear periodicity of properties’“ (DSB). Based on this work Mendeleev was able to compose the first periodic table (as shown in the preface to Volume I), which remains strikingly similar to the first modern periodic table, devised by Moseley in 1914 (see PMM 407). First published in Russian in 1868, the English edition is based on the fifth Russian edition. Horblit 74. Norman 1493. Small institutional inkstamps to preliminaries and title pages. Interiors generally fresh with light scattered foxing, faint marginal dampstaining. A near-fine copy of this scarce and important work. | First edition in English of Mendeleev’s pioneering chemistry textbook, providing the basis of the Periodic Law, with numerous in-text illustrations and diagrams, including folding “Periodicity of the Elements,” in original gilt-lettered cloth. au t um n 2014 75. (MENDELEEV, Dmitrii) MENDELÉEFF, D. The Principles of Chemistry. London, 1891. Two volumes. Octavo, original burgundy cloth. $3200. au t um n 2014 | americana 62 A mericana 63 au t um n 2014 | a m eric a n a abraham lincoln / get t ysburg address “One Of The Supreme Utterances Of The Principles Of Democratic Freedom” (PMM): First Edition Of Lincoln’s Gettysburg Address, Exceptional In Original Wrappers 77. (CIVIL WAR) (LINCOLN, Abraham) EVERETT, Edward. An Oration Delivered on the Battlefield of Gettysburg, (November 19, 1863) at the Consecration of the Cemetery Prepared for the Interment of the Remains of Those Who Fell in the Battles of July 1st, 2d, and 3d, 1863. New York, 1863. Octavo, original russet printed wrappers, custom slipcase. $55,000. Rare first edition of Lincoln’s magnificent Gettysburg Address, scrawled, according to legend, on scratch-paper and envelopes, corresponding almost exactly to the spoken version transcribed by Associated Press reporter Joseph L. Gilbert. The Gettysburg Address, a few short lines scrawled, according to legend, on scratch-paper and the backs of envelopes, is one of America’s most cherished documents. As noted by David Mearns of the Library of Congress, “Touch any aspect of the Address and you touch a mystery”—one immersed in history. Before a large crowd assembled at Gettysburg, orator Edward Everett delivered his address as President Lincoln waited on the platform, occasionally “removing his speech and glancing over it before returning it to his “We can not dedicate, we can not pocket… As Everett started back to his seat, Lincoln stood to clasp his hand and warmly congratulate him… the ‘flutter and motion of the crowd consecrate, we can not hallow this ground. ceased the moment the President was on his feet… Lincoln put on his steel-rimmed spectacles and glanced down at his pages. Though he had The brave men, living and dead, who had but a brief time to prepare the address, he had devoted intense thought to his chosen theme for nearly a decade… giving truth to the struggled here, have consecrated it, far phrase ‘all men are created equal… ‘Four score and seven years ago,’ Lincoln began” (Goodwin, Team of Rivals, 585-6). This work paid above our poor power to add or detract.” “unforgettable justice to the thousands of young Americans who had struggled with incredible bravery” (Bruce Catton). “The Washington Chronicle of 18-21 November reported extensively on this ceremony and included a verbatim text of ‘Edward Everett’s Great Oration.’ On the fourth day it noted in passing that the President had also made a speech, but gave no details. When it came to the separate publication on 22 November, Everett’s ‘Oration’ was reprinted from the standing type, but Lincoln’s speech had to be set up. It was tucked away as a final paragraph on page 16 of the pamphlet. It was similarly treated when the meanly produced leaflet was replaced by a 48-page booklet published by Baker and Godwin of New York in the same year” (PMM 351). This is that New York printing, with Lincoln’s Address on page 40. This edition was preceded only by the exceptionally rare 16-page pamphlet, The Gettysburg Solemnities, known in only three copies. This printing corresponds almost exactly to the spoken version transcribed by Associated Press reporter Joseph L. Gilbert, with the omission of “poor” in “our poor power to add or detract,” and correcting “refinished” to “unfinished work.” Wills, 191-204; 261-263. Streeter 1747. Monaghan 193. Text very fresh with expert archival repair to title page not affecting text, expert restoration to spine and reinforcement to wrappers. An extremely good copy of this important Lincoln rarity. au t um n 2014 | americana 64 abraham lincoln Important Six-Line Autograph Endorsement Signed By Lincoln On Christmas Day, 1861, For The Formation Of General Meagher’s Famous New York City Irish Brigade 78. (CIVIL WAR) LINCOLN, Abraham. Autograph endorsement signed. Washington, DC, 25 December 1861. Quarto, two sheets: two manuscript pages (on two sheets) in the hand of General Thomas F. Meagher; on the verso of one sheet is Lincoln’s endorsement, which consists of six lines with his signature and date-line. Sheets measure 7-3/4 by 7-1/4 inches and 7-3/4 by 9-3/4 inches. Window-matted and framed with portrait. $22,000. An extraordinary Lincoln signed endorsement as President: on Christmas Day, 1861, he responds to General Thomas F. Meagher’s request for appointments to his famous “Irish Brigade.” 65 a m eric a n a The brigade was so decimated in these engagements that it had to be disbanded. In this two-page document, Meagher requests several key staff appointments, including one for a sergeant who had saved Meagher’s during the Civil War) life in battle: “Colonel Meagher will feel extremely obliged and grateful to the President should the accompanying list of appointments be… confirmed, and that with all possible despatch, as the interests and efficiency of the brigade require the quick completion of the organization. [He recommends as] Assistant Adjutant General Joseph McCoy, Sergeant 5th Cavalry, N. L. A., been seven years in the service, four or five in Texas, saved the life of Colonel Meagher at Bull Run, having taken him from under the fire of the batteries at the imminent risk of his own” and “Brigade Surgeon Dr. Francis Reynolds, Fellow of the Royal College of Surgeons, Dublin, served as Brigade and Division Surgeon all through the Crimean War, has the highest testimonials, and is now acting as Surgeon of the 4th Regt. of the Irish Brigade.” Published in Collected Works V, page 79. From the famed collection of Philadelphian John Gribbell. Fine condition, expertly silked with minor split to one horizontal fold, handsomely framed. An exceptional Lincoln presidential endorsement with substantial historical significance. (Lincoln at Harrison’s Landing | “God Bless the Irish flag.” au t um n 2014 Lincoln’s endorsement reads: “Within is the list of persons whom Gen. T. F. Meagher wishes appointed to his staff. He is very anxious, & I promised him to urge compliance as far as consistent with the service. Please have Adj’t Genl. look to it. A. Lincoln. Dec. 25, 1861.” Meagher, an Irish immigrant, had at one time been condemned to death for high treason in Ireland. The sentence commuted, he escaped to the United States in 1852 and “became the virtual leader of the Irish element in New York City… With the outbreak of the Civil War, Meagher organized in 1861 a company of Zouaves which became part of the 69th Volunteers. With his regiment he took part in the first battle of Bull Run, where he had a horse shot under him while acting as a field officer. In the winter of 1861-62 he organized in New York City the Irish Brigade, and became its commander, Feb. 3, 1862, participating in the battles of Antietam, the Peninsular Campaign, Second Bull Run, and Chancellorsville” (DAB). au t um n 2014 | americana 66 j . e . b . stuart “Have Your Command Ready For The Enemy’s Advance. A Stiff Upper Lip Is Very Important”: Outstanding 1863 Autograph Letter Written And Signed By J.E.B. Stuart Giving Command Instructions Related To The Battles Of Auburn 79. (CIVIL WAR) STUART, J.E.B. Autograph letter signed. Virginia, October, 1863. Single sheet of lined paper measuring 8 by 7 inches, matted and framed to 34 by 37 inches with carte-de-visite, printed military record, and chromolithograph. $25,000. Exceptional 1863 autograph signed letter written entirely in J.E.B. Stuart’s hand written around the time of the Battles of Auburn instructing his correspondent to recall a scouting party, to “put your pickets on the alert [and] a m eric a n a The first Battle of Auburn, on October 13, 1863, placed Stuart’s forces in a potentially disastrous position between Union Troops; the second battle on the following day extricated Stuart and his men from possible capture. This framed piece also includes a carte-de-visite depicting J.E.B. Stuart, Stuart’s printed military record, and a chromolithograph after a work of art by artist Joe Umble. A wonderful framed piece in fine condition including an exceptional signed autograph letter by J.E.B. Stuart. | The letter, in its entirety, reads: “As the enemy has retired from Luray towards Sperryville you may as well recall the scouting party sent towards Milam’s gap. Put your pickets on the alert—as the signal corps on Clarke Mtn. report a column supposed to be a brigade or two of Cavalry moving from Culpeper on Locustdale road past Mrs. Green’s. Make all the resistance you can—&keep me as well as the Infy commander contiguous to you informed of these movement—In addition send a Scout through the woods beyond the Robinson to discover what has become of this body of Cavalry. Have your command ready for the enemy’s advance. A stiff upper lip is very important.” 67 au t um n 2014 make all the resistance you can,” to send a new scout looking for cavalry, and to be ready for the enemy’s advance, handsomely matted and framed with a wonderful carte-de-visite of Stuart, a printing of Stuart’s military record, and a large chromolithograph of “Eyes of the Army,” which depicts J.E.B. Stuart and four Confederate soldiers, signed in pencil by artist Joe Umble. au t um n 2014 | americana 68 “All Persons Held As Slaves… Are And Henceforward Shall Be Free”: Very Scarce January 2, 1863 Official Printing Of Lincoln’s Emancipation Proclamation 80. (CIVIL WAR) LINCOLN, Abraham. (Emancipation Proclamation) General Orders. No. 1. Washington, January 2, 1863. Slim octavo, original self wrappers; pp. 3, (1). $4700. Scarce January 2, 1863 official printing of Lincoln’s Emancipation Proclamation, General Orders. No. 1, one of the earliest official printings of Lincoln’s final version, “among the great documents of human freedom” (National Archives). “President Abraham Lincoln issued the Emancipation Proclamation on January 1, 1863, as the nation approached its third year of bloody civil war… It added moral force to the Union cause and strengthened the Union both militarily and politically. As a milestone along the road to slavery’s final destruction, the Emancipation Proclamation has assumed a place among the great documents of human freedom” (National Archives). While Lincoln actually wrote the Proclamation during July 1862, he was persuaded to postpone its official issuance until after some decisive military coup. The September 1862 Battle of Antietam provided the needed victory and Lincoln officially delivered the first draft of the Proclamation on September 22, to take effect January 1, 1863. This General Orders. No. 1, with a printed date of January 2, 1863, issued circa January 7, is one of the very earliest official printings of Lincoln’s final version after it took effect as law. It was preceded only by the Illinois State Journal “extra” of January 2, 1863 (known only in a single copy), a small format two-page broadside “printed in haste to serve the urgent need for a few copies” (also known only in a single copy), “the resplendent, official folio edition” (Eberstadt 10) (the latter known only in nine copies, including seven in institutional libraries), and a circular letter issued circa January 5. A fine copy. Important Early 1864 Printing Of The Gettysburg Address, The First Typeset From An Actual Lincoln Manuscript 81. (CIVIL WAR) (LINCOLN, Abraham) EVERETT, Edward. Address of Hon. Edward Everett… with the Dedicatory Speech of President Lincoln. Boston, 1864. Slim octavo, original dark brown cloth rebacked with partial original spine laid down. $8500. Scarce and important early 1864 printing of Lincoln’s Gettysburg Address, apparently the first to be typeset from an original Lincoln manuscript (rather than a published newspaper account), with map and folding plan of the battlefield, in original cloth. This rare association copy with a gift inscription by David Wills, who led the campaign to dedicate the battlefield, invited Lincoln to speak at the ceremony, housed him in his Gettysburg home and was pivotal in the publication of this edition. This important early version of Lincoln’s address was apparently typeset from an original Lincoln manuscript (probably a fair copy by Lincoln, but perhaps even the so-called “delivery text”), which supposedly was given to David Wills for the cemetery archives—but which was later sent by Wills to Everett. Lincoln’s address, typeset from a newspaper reporter’s transcription rather than an original manuscript, was first published as a pamphlet with Everett’s speech on November 22, 1863 by the Washington Chronicle Office (only two copies are known to exist), and then in book form by Baker and Godwin later that year (also extremely rare). This early printing precedes the final version, an “autographic” version written out by Lincoln himself and published in lithographic facsimile in Autograph Leaves of our Country’s Authors (Baltimore, 1864). Without original printed wrapper, rarely found. This copy with faint trace of early inked, “Dartmouth College Library. Compliments of David Wills, Gettysburg Pa. May 17, 1892,” on the front free endpaper. Text generally fresh, minor tape reinforcement to verso and recto margins of leaf with Wills’ inscription not affecting text, tiny open tear to rear blank. The warrant reads: “We command that you summon Thomas Copeland of Hull in said county of Suffolk yeoman… to appear before Our Justices of Our Inferiour Court of Common Pleas to be holden at Boston… to answer to Henry Turner of Braintree… apothecary, in a plea of trespass… for that whereas the said Thomas… by his note under his hand for value received, promised the said Henry Turner to pay him or his order, nine pounds six shillings lawful money, in five months… yet the said Thomas, tho requested has never paid the sum, but neglects it.” The Thomas Copeland referred to in the case above was the son of Thomas Copeland and Susannah Collier of Hull, and was born in 1741. Dr. Henry Turner (1660-1773), the plaintiff in this case, was an apothecary who lived in Old Braintree. Adams’ diary mentions taking a walk with him, but the John Adams legal papers make no mention of a case involving Thomas Copeland and Henry Turner; perhaps the summons was enough to aid the two to settle their differences. Fine condition. “One Of The Epic Works On The Confederate Armies” 83. (CIVIL WAR) FREEMAN, Douglas Southall. Lee’s Lieutenants: A Study in Command. New York, 1942-44. Three volumes. Octavo, original black cloth, dust jackets. $2500. First editions of all three volumes of Freeman’s important study of Lee’s officers, signed by Freeman in Volume I. Profusely illustrated with numerous fullpage photographs, as well as many maps and battle plans, including a double-page map and a large folding map of the Army’s battlegrounds, in original dust jackets. “One of the epic works on the Confederate armies, these exhaustively researched and brilliantly written volumes deserve to be read by all Civil War students. Freeman employs an amazing quantity of information, much of it gleaned from Confederate sources in Richmond, and he is an interesting and intelligent writer, offering insights into a multiplicity of actions and personalities. The three hefty volumes cover the period following Sumter to the end of the Peninsular campaign, Second Bull Run to Chancellorsville, and the Gettysburg campaign to war’s end” (Eicher 971). Lee’s Lieutenants supplements Freeman’s classic biography of Lee and “stands in its own right as one of the great works of military history” (In Tall Cotton, 61). Contemporary owner inscription (III). Books fine; light edge-wear, tape repairs to verso (I), faint dampstaining to spine ends (II, III) of scarce dust jackets. A near-fine copy. a m eric a n a Legal warrant, filled out in 25-year-old John Adams’ hand in his duties as a lawyer, and signed by him on the verso. Scarce and desirable. | 82. ADAMS, John. Partly printed autograph document signed. Boston, December 17, 1760. Legal folio, one page, matted and framed with engraved portrait. Entire piece measures 24-1/2 by 19-1/2 inches. $3800. 69 au t um n 2014 1760 Document Signed By John Adams As A 25-Year-Old Lawyer In Boston au t um n 2014 | americana 70 “stonewall” jackson Professor “Hell And Thunder” Jackson Grades His 14 Students In VMI’s Class Of 1859: All Went On To Serve As Officers In The Army Of The Confederacy 84. (CIVIL WAR) (JACKSON, Thomas J. “Stonewall”). Partly printed autograph document signed—Virginia Military Institute Grading Report. Lexington, June 17, 1859. Quarto, one leaf, 7-3/4 by 10 inches, printed and engrossed in ink on recto, docketed in ink on verso. WITH: Carte-de-visite albumen photograph, measuring 2-1/2 by 4 inches. $32,500. Scarce partly printed 1859 class report signed “T.J. Jackson / Prof.” to Col. F.H. Smith, Superintendent, Virginia Military Institute. Completely filled out by Jackson, with the names and grades of his 14 students, all of whom went on to serve as officers in the Army of the Confederacy, and docketed by Jackson on verso. Jackson taught at Virginia Military Institute—where he was known to cadets as “Hell and Thunder”—for ten years before the outbreak of the Civil War. “There stands Jackson like a stone wall—rally round the Virginians!” (General Barnard Bee) Three years after distinguishing himself in the Mexican War, in 1851, “Jackson resigned from the army to accept a professorship of optics and artillery tactics at the Virginia Military Institute in Lexington. He spent the next ten years—a fourth of his life—at VMI. There the Jackson of fact and legend emerged… Jackson was one of VMI’s poorest instructors. He was too rigid, too inflexible in his presentations, too demanding of his students. Cadets quickly made him the butt of jokes and pranks. They referred to him as ‘Tom Fool,’ ‘Hell and Thunder,’ and ‘crazy as damnation” (ANB). Over 50 words have been penned by Stonewall Jackson as he filled out this weekly class report for the week ending June 7th, 1859, 2d Sec., 1st class, Artillery. In the first two columns, Jackson has listed the names of the 14 students in his class, numbering them 1-14. His class met on Mondays, Wednesdays, and Fridays. Prof. Jackson gave 11 of his 14 students the maximum 9, one 8.9, one 8.7 and one, marked absent all week, received no grade. In the “Progress during the Week” box at the right, Jackson wrote “on genl. review of Arty tactics Cooke leaving leaving [sic] Arty recitation on the 13 & not returning.” At the bottom Jackson has penned “To / Col. F.H. Smith / Supt V.M.I. / T.J. Jackson / Prof.” All of Jackson’s students went on to serve as officers in the Confederate Army, as did Jackson himself, of course. (More extensive biographies of all the cadets are available.). Together with a carte-de-visite albumen photograph of Jackson, circa 1855. Two faint horizontal fold lines. Lightly foxed, bit of toning near edges. Fine condition. 71 au t um n 2014 | a m eric a n a harper’s weekly / full civil war years “A Delight To The Casual Reader And A Rich Treasury For The Historical Investigator”: Five Volumes Of Harper’s Weekly, 1861-65, Covering The Civil War Years, With Numerous Wood-Engravings By Homer And Nast 85. (CIVIL WAR). Harper’s Weekly: A Journal of Civilization. Volumes V-IX. New York, 1861-65. Five volumes. Large thick folio (12 by 16 inches), modern three-quarter brown morocco gilt. $12,500. Critical run of one of the great contemporary historical sources of the Civil War, containing first-hand accounts from the battlefield and thousands of wood engraved illustrations by such noted American artists as Winslow Homer and Thomas Nast, including many scenes of battle and camp, portraits of officers, political cartoons, maps and battle plans. Begun in 1857, Harper’s Weekly remains one of the most valuable primary sources for understanding 19th-century American life. “The old files of Harper’s Weekly are a delight to the casual reader and a rich treasury for the historical investigator. Here is a vital illustrated history… The combination of pictures, politics, essays and fiction gives [Harper’s] “Homer moved past patriotic first-rate importance” (Mott, 469). Issues from the Civil War years contain not only an indepth view of civilian life during the war, but dramatic first-hand accounts from the rhetoric to provide what are battlefronts, graphic scenes of engagement in the field and life in the camps. From the first encounter at Fort Sumter, through all the hard-fought campaigns and into the beginnings of Reconstruction, Harper’s chronicles the bloody years that indelibly shaped the future of among the first glimpses of the United States. Articles and essays present the points of view of generals, politicians, merchants, slaves, ordinary soldiers and common citizens, north and south. Virtually every modern battle as it really is.” page offers insight into this pivotal era, with thousands of wood-engravings, a great many by famous artists Winslow Homer and Thomas Nast. The year 1862 contains three of (The New Yorker) Homer’s most memorable and collected pieces from his Civil War years: “The Surgeon,” “The Sharpshooter,” and “Thanksgiving in Camp.” The 1864 volume has bound at rear two issues of Frank Leslie’s Budget of Fun (September 1861 and October 1864); the New York Illustrated News of March 8, 1862; Frank Leslie’s Illustrated Newspaper of May 2, 1863; and an addition copy of Harper’s Weekly for July 11, 1863. Occasional owner names; large dealer label on page 670 of the 1862 volume. Scattered marginal dampstaining in the second, third and fifth volumes; interiors generally quite clean, with only a few expertly repaired tears affecting text or images. A handsomely bound set. robert e . lee / mathew brady americana “Your Illustrious Father’s Photograph, Which Bears His Name Written Before My Eyes With His Own Dear Hand”: Signed By General Robert E. Lee, Rare Vintage Albumen Print Of Lee, Circa 1865, From A Photograph By Mathew Brady, Accompanied By Two Exceptional Letters Of Provenance au t um n 2014 | 72 86. (CIVIL WAR) [BRADY, Mathew] LEE, Robert E. Photograph signed. Richmond, circa 1865. Vintage oval albumen print (5-1/4 by 7-1/4 inches) mounted on ivory card stock (total 8 by 10 inches), signed on print recto. WITH: ALS (Lee), original tan leaf (5 by 8 inches folded), envelope; ALS (Landry), original lined tan leaf (8 by 10 inches). $19,500. Rare vintage albumen print, circa 1865, of General Robert E. Lee, boldly signed by him in the lower portion of the image, from a photograph by Mathew Brady—“the “Father of American Photography”— a distinguished portrait of Lee in uniform and in profile, taken on his porch in Richmond only days after Appomattox and the death of Lincoln. With accompanying letters of provenance: the first an autograph letter signed by Lee’s daughter, Mary Custis Lee, in response an autograph letter signed by Confederate Captain Landry, who fought under Longstreet and Lee and “was included in the surrender of Lee’s army at Appomattox”—with Landry writing, in his letter, of witnessing Lee signing this rare photographic portrait. This rare vintage albumen print of General Robert E. Lee is from a photograph by famed photographer Mathew Brady. This bust-length portrait of Lee in uniform, seen in profile and boldly signed by him, was taken by Brady in April 1865, not long after Lee returned to Richmond after Appomattox. Lee entered the city on the very day Lincoln died from a gunshot wound inflicted by John Wilkes Booth and as Brady was “hurrying to Richmond over the same roads Lee had taken” (Meredith, 195). This handsome signed vintage albumen print is accompanied by two exceptional letters of provenance: one of Lee’s daughter and the other from a soldier who was present at his surrender at Appomattox. The letter from Mary Custis Lee, written in manuscript hand and signed by her, reads, in part: “Roanoke Virginia May 11th 1902. My Dear Sir… though I have not the pleasure of your acquaintance, I determined to write to you, & tell you how deeply I was touched by your kind expressions… It is no news to me that all who followed him, adored & idolized him, but the reiteration of their devotion is always most grateful, & I cannot hear it too often… believe most cordially, to my Father’s old soldier, very truly yours. Mary Custis Lee.” The text of Landry’s response, in manuscript on a folded sheet of lined paper and signed by him, reads, in part: “Donaldson [Louisiana], May 21, 1902. Mrs. Mary Custis Lee, Romancoke, VA. My Dear Mrs. Lee, Your beautiful letter pleased me so much… And yet no less could have been expected from the daughter of such a father… I shall certainly keep it with as much care as I have kept your illustrious father’s photograph, which bears his name written before my eyes with his own dear hand [emphasis added]… to know that you are happy will always rejoice the heart of your unknown friend. R. Prosper Landry.” Signed vintage print, rarely seen this large, lightly toned along with card mount, signature bold and crisp, corners of card stock lightly trimmed without affecting image or print mount, indiscernible light expert restoration to print background only. Lee ALS with vertical closed tear at center foldline archivally repaired, tiny closed tear to a foldline on rear leaf, envelope with small tape repairs; Landry ALS with minor wear at faint foldlines. A most desirable signed albumen print with an especially memorable provenance. 73 au t um n 2014 | a m eric a n a thomas jefferson / james madison Fine Document Signed By Thomas Jefferson As President And James Madison As Secretary Of State 87. JEFFERSON, Thomas. Ship’s papers signed. New York, July 31, 1806. Folio (10 by 15 inches), one leaf, engraved on the recto and finished by hand. Mounted and framed with portraits of Jefferson and Madison. $17,000. Fine ornate vellum Ship’s Passport for the Ship Sally of New York, Ebenezer H. Mix, Commander, signed by Jefferson as President, countersigned by Madison as Secretary of State, with two engraved maritime images and the original paper seal. Handsomely framed with portraits. Sea letters had long been used to establish proof of nationality and guarantee protection for ships. The document reads: “SUFFER the Ship Sally of New York, Ebenezer H. Mix, master or commander, of the burthen of Two hundred and thirty-six 89/95 tons or thereabouts, mounted with four guns, navigated with fifteen men, TO PASS with her Company, Passengers, Goods and Merchandize, without any hindrance, seizure or “The boisterous sea of liberty molestation: the said Ship appearing, by good testimony, to belong to one or more of the Citizens of the United States, and to him or them only. GIVEN under my Hand and the Seal is never without a wave.” of the United States of America, the 31st day of July in the year of our Lord one thousand eight hundred and six. [signed] Th. Jefferson. By the President. [signed] James Madison (Thomas Jefferson) Secretary of State. State of New York, District of Sag Harbor.” Countersigned by David Gettson, collector.” The top edge is scalloped through the top engraving, as was the custom, with the collector holding a matching document that completed the engraving. Jefferson’s signature dark and clear, Madison’s just a bit lighter. Fine condition. au t um n 2014 | americana 74 “The Bearer Comes For The 4 Pounds Of Tea You Promised”: Autograph Letter Signed By Founding Father Richard Henry Lee 88. LEE, Richard Henry. Autograph letter signed. Chantilly, [Virginia], April 13, 1769. Original ivory leaf of laid paper (4-1/2 by 7-1/2 inches folded), manuscript on recto and integral address leaf. $5200. Rare April 13, 1769 autograph letter signed by Founding Father Richard Henry Lee, signer of the Declaration of Independence, revolutionary leader, and author of famed Lee Resolution. Founding Father Lee, a signer of the Declaration of Independence, is also famed “as the man who introduced the [Lee] Resolution in Congress that declared American independence” (Alden, 67). “High on the list of America’s forgotten founders… Lee served as a member of the House of Burgesses, House of Delegates, and the United States Senate. He also represented Virginia at the two Continental Congresses and served as president of Congress in 1784” (Encyclopedia Virginia). This rare April 13, 1769 autograph letter signed and dated by Lee is written from his home, Chantilly-on-the-Potomac. In it Lee asks a merchant to provide the letter’s bearer with “the 4 pounds of tea you promised to put by for me… I will pay you your money the next time I have the pleasure of seeing you…. [signed] Richard Henry Lee.” Two years later, in June 776, Lee rose to his feet in the State House. “The importance of the moment was understood by everyone in the room. ‘Resolved [Lee began]… That these United Colonies are, and of a right ought to be, free and independent’” (McCullough, 118). The delegates were electrified. To John Adams independence was marked not the Declaration but by the Lee Resolution. Inked text and signature clear and dark, light wear at faint foldlines, mild soiling to near-fine letter. “I Believe In One God And No More… I Believe In The Equality Of Man”: Very Scarce 1794 First American Edition Of Part I Of Paine’s Age Of Reason 89. PAINE, Thomas. The Age of Reason. Being an Investigation of True and Fabulous Theology. New-York, 1794. Small octavo (4-3/4 by 7 inches), 19th-century full crimson morocco gilt rebacked with original spine laid down. $8500. First American edition of Paine’s landmark Age of Reason, “his great work of this period” (ANB; copyrighted and published only a few months after the Paris and London first editions; all early editions in English are highly desirable. Part I of Paine’s Age of Reason “was written in Paris in 1793—in haste, because although Paine had originally been lionized by the French as a true ally in the cause of liberté, égalité, fraternité, he soon became disillusioned by the increasing violence of the revolution… Arrested on Robespierre’s order, Paine was able to deliver the manuscript to his friend Joel Barlow, a close friend of Jefferson’s, while en route to the Luxembourg Prison on December 28, 1793” (Jacoby). Paine believed “religious beliefs had to be reasonable and that God had given human beings control over their lives to perform good deeds… By his rational analysis of God, government, and society, Paine personified the Age of Reason” (Fruchtman). A virtually unobtainable edition in French was published in March 1793 and immediately suppressed, with only one known copy found. In March 1794 the first obtainable edition in French was published and the edition in English, both in Paris. Gimbel states that “copies printed cheaply in English were sent to America, but a much finer edition was printed in Paris for circulation in England” (Gimbel-Yale 88). All early editions in English are highly desirable, including the first American edition offered here. Bookplate. Text fresh with only light scattered foxing, half title expertly reinforced at gutter's edged. A very scarce about-fine copy of a seminal Paine work, handsomely bound. 75 “The Clearest Of All Expositions Of The Basic Principles Of Democracy” (PMM): Rare 1791-92 Second Edition Of Paine’s Rights Of Man, Where Paine “Fully Developed His Great Political Philosophy” au t um n 2014 90. PAINE, Thomas. Rights of Man... Second Edition. BOUND WITH: Rights of Man. Part the Second... The Second Edition. London, 1791, 1792. Octavo, full contemporary calf LATER red morocco spine label. $15,000. a m eric a n a Rare 1791-1792 editions of Paine’s revolutionary classic, containing the second edition, first issue of Rights of Man (Part I), issued very soon after the first edition—where “Paine laid down those principles of fundamental human rights which must stand” (PMM)—together in one volume with the second edition, first issue of Part the Second, handsomely bound in contemporary calf. Hoping Rights of Man “would do for England what his Common Sense had done for America,” Paine answered Edmund Burke’s attack on the French Revolution with his “celebrated answer, The Rights of Man” (Gimbel-Yale 59). Written “with a force and clarity unequalled even by Burke, Paine laid down those principles of fundamental human rights which must stand, no matter what excesses are committed to obtain them… The government tried to suppress it, but it circulated the more briskly… [Rights of Man is] the textbook of radical thought and the clearest of all expositions of the basic principles of democracy” (PMM 241). In this revolutionary work, “Paine’s attack on monarchy went farther than he had attempted on Common Sense or the Crisis series… Rights of Man was one of the most ardent and clear defenses of human rights, liberty and equality in any language… Like Locke, Paine wrote that people have rights naturally, and as they joined together to form society and then government, they transformed a number of their natural rights into civil rights… Rights of free speech, “While Paine’s basic message… opinion, conscience, association (in America those rights became embodied in the first amendment to the Constitution in the same was not new, he went much further. year the first part of the Rights of Man appeared) were all part of the natural rights which a properly constituted government must proReject British heritage, condemn tect.” Rights of Man was dedicated to Washington and first published on his February 22, 1791 birthday by London publisher J. Johnson, monarchy, embrace democracy, but was immediately suppressed. “Paine moved the work almost immediately to J.S. Jordan, a radical printer and bookseller, after enlighten the world.” Johnson lost courage and refused to continue with the effort” (Fruchtman, 228). Interior very fresh with only light occasional mar(National Humanities Center) ginal dampstaining, tiny bit of edge-wear and dampstaining to boards, headcap expertly repaired. | thomas paine au t um n 2014 | americana 76 77 au t um n 2014 | a m eric a n a thomas paine Exceedingly Rare First English Edition First State Of Common Sense, “The Most Influential Tract Of The American Revolution” 91. [PAINE, Thomas]. Common Sense; Addressed to the Inhabitants of America… A New Edition, with several Additions in the Body of the Work. To which is added an Appendix; together with an Address to the People called Quakers. Philadelphia, Printed; London, Re-Printed, 1776. Slim octavo, modern three-quarter green morocco. $25,000. Rare first British edition, first state, of Common Sense, issued in 1776 within months of the first American edition, a work of such paramount interest to both America and Britain that this edition was issued almost certainly before the Declaration of Independence— that founding document whose issuance on July 4, 1776 “was due more to Paine’s Common Sense than to any one other single piece of writing”—with first state half title and all of the hiatuses (including the two in the Introduction), handsomely bound in three-quarter morocco by Aquarius, London. “Without the pen of Paine, “By far the most influential tract of the American Revolution… it remains one of the most brilliant pamphlets ever written in the English language” (A Covenanted People 27). The the sword of Washington would 1776 American editions of Common Sense ignited the drive for independence throughout the colonies and led directly to the ratification of the Declaration of Independence. It was have been wielded in vain.” “the most discussed and most widely circulated pamphlet in America” (Gimbel, 49). The British editions had a similar impact, greatly affecting public opinion and drawing many (John Adams) influential Englishmen to support the American cause. “It would be difficult to name any human composition which has had an effect at once so instant, so extended and so lasting… Common Sense turned thousands to independence who before could not endure the thought. It worked nothing short of miracles and turned Tories into Whigs” (Trevelyan, History of the American Revolution). This first British edition contains Paine’s additions, increasing the original work by one-third. Unlike “We have it in our power to subsequent English editions, this rare first state contains all of the hiatuses where words and passages critical of the English crown have been deleted: with “N—” on line 16 of page 23, begin the world over again.” hiatuses in lines 15 and 17 of the Introduction, on line 3 of page 25, and with “pedling” on page 31 (3rd line from bottom); along with, as in all editions, hiatuses on pages 14, 17, 23, 24, 25, 28, 29, 30, 41, 42, 45, 51, 52 (Gimbel, Table III:86-7). There were four London editions of Common Sense printed by John Almon in 1776, issued in two forms—with James Chalmer’s Plain Truth and a general half title page listing both works, or separately, both with and without the half title. This copy of Common Sense is in the format with the first state half title; without Chalmer’s Plain Truth. This true first English edition of Common Sense is most exceedingly rare and difficult to obtain. Gimbel CS-24. APS, 45. Small bibliographic slip tipped-in at rear. Minimal annotation to one page. Interior very fresh with only light scattered foxing, mild occasional edge-wear. A handsome about-fine copy, rare and important. au t um n 2014 | americana 78 thomas paine “Give Not The Tyrant Of England The Triumph Of Seeing The Man Perish On The Scaffold Who Helped My Much Loved America”: First Editions Of Paine’s 1792 And 1793 Brilliant Pamphlets, Printed In Paris Amidst The French Revolution, Opposing The Execution Of Louis XVI, Arguing Only A Trial Will Lead “The World To Know And Detest The Disastrous System Of Monarchy” 92. (PAINE, Thomas). Opinion de Thomas Payne, Depute du Departement de la Somme, Concernant le Jugement de Louis XVI. Paris, De l’Imprimerie nationale, 1792. WITH: Opinion de Thomas Payne, Sur l’Affaire de Louis Capet. Paris, 1793. Two volumes. Slim octavo, disbound. Louis XVI; pp. 8; Louis Capet; pp. 10; chemise. $12,000. First editions of two exceptional revolutionary works by Paine, authored by him after escaping prison in Britain as revolutionary France debated the fate of Louis XVI—containing his “Opinion… concernant le jugement de Louis XVI,” delivered before the Convention Nationale in Paris on November 21, 1792, and his “Opinion… sur l’affair de Louis Capet,” delivered on January 15, 1793, with Paine passionately calling for a trial and clemency in his certainty that America would oppose the guillotine, remembering how Louis—and France—aided the American Revolution, with Paine soon to be imprisoned himself and finally freed two years to the month after the first of these was delivered. In 1792 Paine was forced to flee Britain, never to return. Arriving in Paris he was “eager to participate in the country’s revolutionary politics, but… spoke little French and still tended to see things in terms of his American experience.” With France divided over the fate of Louis XIV, Paine argued against execution, urging Louis be tried as Louis Capet, the name Paine granted him. “Paine also knew Americans had not forgotten that it was Louis’ government that had aided their revolution” (Kaye, 79-80). Paine’s On the Propriety of Bringing Louis XVI to Trial, translated into French as Opinion.… concernant “Deist, abolitionist, inventor— le jugement de Louis XVI, was read before the Convention on November 21, 1792. Here he argues only a trial will “lead all nations in the world to know and detest the Thomas Paine embodied the disastrous system of monarchy.” After Louis was found guilty in December, Paine’s Opinion... sur l’affaire de Louis Capet, a translation of his Reasons for wishing to revolutionary radicalism of preserve the life of Louis Capet, was delivered to the Convention in January 1793. “For all its tactical and intellectual brilliance… Paine’s plea for clemency was defeated” (Keane, 367). At the height of the Terror, Paine was arrested and held until November the eighteenth century.” 1794, two years after the first of these seminal works was delivered. Louis XVI (19.8 cm) with “Législation. (No. 15),” “A Paris, De L’imprimerie Nationale, 1792” at lower (National Park Service) edge of first page. Louis Capet (19.6 cm) with “Législation. (No. 221)” at lower edge of first page, “De L’Imprimerie Nationale” at lower edge of rear text leaf. Each with “Convention Nationale” at upper edge of first page, “Imprimée par ordre de la Convention Nationale” following title of first page. Copies of Louis XVI found issued the same year in variously paged editions at Dijon, Lyon and Nismes; of Louis Capet found issued at Dijon: no priority established. Text in French. Gimbel-Paine, 85-87. Gimbel-Yale 79, 80. Text generally fresh with only faint dampstaining to Louis Capet. Important near-fine copies of two rarely found Paine works. 79 au t um n 2014 | a m eric a n a william bl ackstone “A Vast Influence Both In England And America”: Important First American Edition Of Blackstone’s Commentaries, With The Rare Subscriber’s List, In Full Contemporary Sheep—Original Subscriber’s Copy 93. BLACKSTONE, William. Commentaries on the Laws of England. Philadelphia, 1771-72. Four volumes. Octavo, contemporary full brown sheep, two custom clamshell boxes. $25,000. First American edition, first issue, of this monumental treatise that greatly influenced the development of the American legal system, this distinctive association copy with the 22-page subscribers list, rarely found, which names leading Revolutionary figures such as John Adams, Federalist co-author John Jay, John Dickinson, and this set’s original owner Richard Thomas, “Farmer, Chester County, Pennsylvania” signed and dated on each title page by him. The first edition was published in England in 1765. This set first American edition, first issue. Volume III includes the publisher’s rare octavo broadside prospectus “To the Encouragers of Literature” tipped to leaf preceding title page announcing publication of An Interesting Appendix to the Commentaries; four pages of advertisements preceding title page of Volume I; Volume IV without single advertisement leaf mounted on fly leaf preceding title page, often not present. Complete with two tables, one folding, and 22-page subscriber’s list. Harvard Law Catalogue I:188. Original owner signatures of subscriber Richard Thomas on title pages, dated 17721774, and flyleaves. Later owner signature to title pages. Two leaves in Volume I (Y3-4) torn, with portions of text supplied in a neat facsimile. Minor expert paper repair to folding table (Volume II) near stub. Spines dried, front joints of three volumes repaired, contemporary calf showing some wear. A desirable subscriber’s copy in the original American sheep binding. au t um n 2014 | americana 80 81 An extraordinarily rare July 1775 Massachusetts newspaper printing (occupying the entire front page) of one of the greatest state papers of the American Revolution and the most important forerunner to the Declaration of Independence, written by Thomas Jefferson and John Dickinson for the Second Continental Congress. Within a month of the battles of Lexington and Concord, the second Continental Congress met in May 1775. The majority of the delegates were unsure about what should be done about the ongoing crisis with Great Britain, and while some thought reconciliation with Britain was still possible, others strongly believed that war was inevitable. Their ambivalence is reflected in their actions, debates, and writings. On July 5, Congress drafted the Olive Branch Petition, a letter to George III in which they appealed for the final time to their king to hear their grievances in order to avoid more bloodshed. But the next day, on July 6, Congress issued on of its most important documents, their “Declaration… [on] the causes and necessity of their taking up Arms,” written by Thomas Jefferson and John Dickinson. It is a strong statement of grievances against Britain (including taxation without representation, interference with commerce, and violation their rights to trial by jury) as well as a plea for peace and reconciliation. Its purpose was to justify before the world their armed resistance to the British Parliament’s attempt to enforce an absolute authority over the colonies: “Our cause is just. Our union is perfect. Our internal resources are great… the arms we have been compelled by our enemies to assume, we will, in defiance of every hazard, with unabating firmness and perseverance, employ for the preservation of our liberties, being with one mind resolved, to die Freemen rather than to live as slaves.” The “Declaration… [on] Taking Up Arms” is one of the greatest of the state papers of the Revolution and the most important precursor to the Declaration of Independence. Before issuing the Declaration of Independence, “Congress had produced some fifteen other state papers in the form of letters, petitions, proposals, addresses, and a speech, but it had issued only one other ‘declaration’ as a formal precedent for the Declaration of Independence: the ‘Declaration… [on] Taking Up Arms” “The penultimate step to declaring of July 6, 1775…. In it, [Jefferson and Dickinson] had acknowledged ‘obligations of respect to the rest of the world, to make known the justice independence from England.” of our cause’ and had ‘exhibit[ed] to mankind’ the plight of a wronged people. Like the Declaration of Independence, the ‘Declaration… [on] (New York Historical Society) Taking Up Arms’ marked a decisive turning point in the struggle between Britain and its American colonies: in this case, the move by the colonists to formal armed conflict” (Armitage, The Declaration of Independence: A Global History, 31-32). The Declaration was issued by Congress on July 6, 1775; there were contemporary newspaper, pamphlet and broadside printings, all very rare. The rest of this newspaper issue contains other Revolutionary material. Early owner signature in the upper left margin. Original folds with only very light wear and small occasional holes. Near-fine condition. A great rarity. a m eric a n a 94. (JEFFERSON, Thomas and DICKINSON, John). A Declaration by the Representatives of the United Colonies of North-America, now met in General Congress at Philadelphia, Setting forth the Causes and Necessity of their taking up Arms. IN: The New-England Chronicle: Or, The Essex Gazette. Cambridge, Massachusetts, Vol. VII. Numb. 365., July 21 – July 27, 1775. Folio (10 by 15 inches), one large sheet folded once for four pages. $35,000. | “Our Cause Is Just: Our Union Is Perfect … Being With One Mind Resolved To Die Freemen, Rather Than To Live Slaves”: Rare 1775 Contemporary Newspaper Printing Of One Of The Most Important Documents Of The Revolution, Jefferson And Dickinson’s “Declaration On The Causes And Necessity Of Taking Up Arms” au t um n 2014 thomas jefferson au t um n 2014 | americana 82 american revolution Thomas Jefferson—“The True Ground On Which We Declare These Acts Void Is, That The British Parliament Has No Right To Exercise Authority Over Us”: Exceedingly Rare Collection Of First Printings Of Notorious 1774 Intolerable Acts Issued By Parliament And George III As Punishment For The Boston Tea Party, Together With First Printings Of The 1774 Table Of Statutes And Other Key 1774 Parliamentary Acts, Triggering The American Revolution 95. (AMERICAN REVOLUTION) (PARLIAMENT). (Intolerable Acts: Boston Port Act; Administration Of Justice Act; Massachusetts Government Act; Quartering Act). WITH: (Quebec Act). WITH: Four additional acts and table of statutes. London, 1774. Ten volumes. Folio, disbound, custom clamshell box. $35,000. Very rare collection of first printings of the infamous Intolerable Acts serially enacted by Parliament in 1774 as punishment for the Boston Tea Party, together with rare first printings of the 1774 Table of Statutes, the 1774 Quebec Act and four major 1774 parliamentary acts also targeting colonial rebellion, ultimately prompting the convening of the First Continental Congress where Parliament’s punitive acts were cited in its Declaration and Resolves, and thereby propelled American independence. Only 1100 copies of each printed, all ten folio printings. In late 1773 the sight of British ships laden with tea entering Boston harbor heralded “‘something worse than death—the seeds of SLAVERY’… Boston instantly turned into a revolutionary hothouse” that produced, on one memorable October night, the legendary Boston Tea Party.” As news of the Boston Tea Party reached England, George III and Parliament “decided to punish the city and colony in the most draconian manner,” passing a series of what became known as the Intolerable Acts (Schama II:469). “But instead of isolating Massachusetts, as had been hoped, these Acts demonstrated a parliamentary power more dangerous to colonial liberty than mere taxing” (Morison, Sources, xxxiv). When Parliament passed the Boston Port Act, the first Intolerable Act, in March 1774, 83 au t um n 2014 | a m eric a n a it effectively closed Boston harbor. The next Intolerable Act, the Administration of Justice Act, offered British officials accused of crimes new legal protections against hostile juries by authorizing the governor to assign certain cases to trial in England. For many colonists this was known as the “Murder Act” for providing accused murderers an escape from colonial justice. On June 2nd Britain “added insult to injury by expanding the Quartering Act under which Americans were responsible for providing barracks and supplies for the same British troops who were there to enforce the other harsh measures. A fifth piece of legislation, the Quebec Act, was also approved during this period… viewed in America as yet another slap in the face. It extended Canada’s boundary to the Ohio River… and granted French Canadians the right to practice their Catholic faith which the vast majority of British Americans considered a treasonous allegiance to a foreign power, the Pope. In the opinion of many historians, the Quebec Act was perhaps the primary reason the Canadians remained loyal to Britain throughout the American Revolution” (Chorlton, First American Republic, xxxvii). Also of note herein is a Table of Statutes, which lists the notorious Intolerable Acts and the Quebec Act, along with four parliamentary acts also targeting the colonies. Ultimately these attempts to quell American rebellion failed when the “colonies sent delegates to Philadelphia in September 1774, to consult as to what measures should be taken to procure a repeal of the “A plan… to extinguish American Acts, and a redress of other outstanding grievances. It was this Continental Congress which, beginning as an extra-legal consultative body, developed into the federal freedom.” (George H. Smith) government of an independent republic” (Morison, xxxiv, 119). First editions, first printings, issued in combined gothic and roman type, of which only 1100 copies of each act were printed; from the Sessional Volumes of Parliament, preceding all American printings (see Report of the Committee for the Promulgation of the Statutes, 1796). Texts very fresh with only lightest scattered foxing. An exceptional about-fine collection of Revolutionary War acts. au t um n 2014 | americana 84 george washington Revolutionary War Autograph Envelope With George Washington’s Rare Large Free Franking Signature, Addressed To Washington’s Stepson John Parke Custis 96. WASHINGTON, George. Autograph free frank. No place, circa 1780. Single address leaf, manuscript on recto, custom cloth portfolio. $15,000. Exceedingly rare original Revolutionary autograph envelope containing Washington’s rare and extremely large free franking signature on a leaf addressed to John Parke Custis, Washington’s stepson, Martha Washington’s son. Washington’s free franking signature dating from the Revolutionary War is most rare. “I have been called upon by the This rare Revolutionary War autograph envelope bears George Washington’s large free franking signature on the address leaf of a letter (not present) adunanimous voice of the Colonies to the dressed entirely in Washington’s hand to his stepson, John Parke Custis, in New Kent C[oun]ty, Virginia. Custis served as a civilian aide-de-camp to Washington command of the Continental Army… during the siege of Yorktown. However, Custis contracted “camp fever” there. Shortly after the end of the Revolutionary War, Custis died at only 26 years of It is an honor I wished to avoid, as well age on November 5, 1781, in New Kent County at Eltham. His widow left their two youngest children (Eleanor and George) at Mount Vernon to be raised by the as an unwillingness to quit the peaceful Washingtons. “At the outbreak of the Revolutionary War, in 1775, Congress granted the franking privilege [permitting them to send mail without charge unenjoyment of my Family” der their covering signature] to members of the Continental Congress and to military personnel, thus allowing the speedy flow of official mail by either civil or (George Washington, military couriers… Washington used military couriers almost exclusively, merely letter to Colonel Bassett, Jun. 19, 1775) writing ‘Public Service’ and his signature, or perhaps ‘Free’ and his signature, or just his signature on the cover of his letters” (Hamilton, 225-26). With portions of the original red wax seal at the upper edge and on the lower panel. Formerly folded, mildly soiled, a few fold-tears patched with paper, one mended with tape. A very good example of Washington’s scarce and desirable free frank signature, bold and clear. “In America… No One Renders Obedience To Man, But To Justice And To Law” Important Presentation/Association Copy, One Of Only 60 Copies, President Truman’s 1951 Address Made At The Ratification Of The Japanese Peace Treaty 98. (TRUMAN, Harry). Address of the President at the Opening of the Conference on the Japanese Peace Treaty, September 4, 1951. Washington, Christmas 1951. Octavo, original half crushed russet morocco. $16,000. Special limited first edition, one of only 60 copies with the text from Truman’s speech at the Japanese Peace Conference, printed for President Truman at Christmas 1951, warmly inscribed the month of publication to Truman’s Secretary of the Air Force: “To Hon. Stuart Symington, with best wishes for a Merry Christmas, Harry Truman, Dec. 25, 1951.” With his ratification of the Japanese Peace Treaty in San Francisco on September 4, 1951, President Harry Truman brought to a conclusion, in his own words, “a bitter and costly war.” That historic event is commemorated here in a special limited edition of only 60 copies, containing the complete “Address of the President at the Opening of the Conference on the Japanese Peace Treaty.” Within Truman speaks of the “long and patient negotiations… fair to both victor and vanquished,” which produced the treaty, and his hopes for moving the world toward “a firm and lasting peace.” Truman’s warm inscription is to his fellow Missourian Stuart Symington, who Truman appointed in 1947 as “first secretary of the air force,” then in 1950 as chair of the National Security Resources Board. In 1951, “again at Truman’s request, he moved to the chairmanship of the scandal-plagued Reconstruction Finance Corporation,” before serving several distinguished terms in the Senate (ANB). Text generally fresh with only light soiling to preliminary and terminal leaves, light staining to original boards. A near-fine presentation copy with an especially memorable association. a m eric a n a Commissioned by the French government to study the American penal system in 1831-32, Tocqueville ultimately produced, in Democracy in America, “the first systematic and empirical study of the effects of political power on modern society” (Nisbet). “In 1835, the first volume appeared (in French), and throughout the intellectual circles of western Europe both democracy and America took on a new aspect and a new significance in political speculation” (NYU, 955). In his nine-month stay in the United States, Tocqueville absorbed a remarkable sense of the spirit and maintenance of democracy, and he affirmed his faith in mankind’s ability to pursue the democratic society. The first part of the work was published in French in 1835 and the second part in 1840. Each part was translated into English and published separately in both England and American, Part I in London in 1835 and New York in 1838. Part II would not be published in English translation until 1840. This 1841 American edition marks the first time both parts of the work were published together in English. Small owner inkstamps to front pastedowns, minor marginalia to one page (I:45). Interiors generally fresh with light scattered foxing, Volume I with expert archival repair to gutter edge of folding map (I), slight marginal dampstaining to rear leaves, both volumes with expert cloth and text block restoration. A very good copy. | First complete edition in English of Tocqueville’s important and influential analysis of American democracy, one of the outstanding intellectual achievements of the 19th century. This important edition contains a hand-colored folding map of North America with information from the census of 1840, published here for the first time in America, scarce in original cloth. au t um n 2014 97. TOCQUEVILLE, Alexis de. Democracy in America. New York, 1841. Two volumes. Octavo, original brown cloth gilt, custom clamshell box. $7000. 85 au t um n 2014 | americana 86 “Here Began The Horrid Practice Of Forcing Africans Into Slavery”: First Edition Of Clarkson’s History, 1808, With Famous Folding Plate Of The Slave-Ship Brookes 99. CLARKSON, Thomas. The History of the Rise, Progress and Accomplishment of the Abolition of the African Slave-Trade by the British Parliament. London, 1808. Two volumes. Octavo, contemporary marbled boards rebacked. $7000. First edition of Clarkson’s classic history of the slave trade, with the famous large folding engraving of the arrangement of slaves on decks of the slave-ship Brookes according to the “humane” Dolben Bill of 1788, in contemporary marbled boards. Thomas Clarkson, who was “the heart and soul of the campaign for abolition,” led a handful of fervent activists working to untie slave-holding from the fabric of British life (Thomas, 495). His History would prove a vital document in the abolitionist struggles of Britain and America. The famous folding engraved plate of slaves closely fitted on decks of the slave-ship Brookes is one of the most powerful and influential images in the history of the anti-slavery movement. In 1789, William Wilberforce had a scale model of the Brookes built (with images from this plate pasted on its decks), which he presented to the House of Commons during one of his most passionate and persuasive speeches. Also with folding map and engraved plate of shackles in Volume I. Dumond, Antislavery, 169. Volume I with bookplate of the noted British physician, Sir Humphry Davy Rolleston, Baronet. Interior generally fresh with light scattered foxing, folding plates with expert paper repairs, only very minor rubbing to scarce contemporary marbled boards. Signed By “Buffalo Bill” 100. CODY, William F. “Buffalo Bill.” Autograph Sentiment Signed. No place, 1895. Framed piece measures 15 by 13 inches. $4000. Fine autograph sentiment signed by the American showman and scout, creator of the Wild West Show, “Sincerely Yours, W.F. Cody, ‘Buffalo Bill,’ 1895.” Handsomely matted and framed with a bust-length photograph of Cody dressed as a mountain man. Framed with a hand-colored contemporary carte-de visite size photograph of Buffalo Bill, astride his horse, his rifle at the ready. Matted in crimson and walnut, with a bust length photograph of Cody dressed as a mountain man. Fine condition. 87 au t um n 2014 | a m eric a n a american revolution “Certain Units Of The Massachusetts Militia Were Designated As Minutemen…”: Pay Receipt Signed By 11 Massachusetts Minutemen In 1775 Just A Week Before The Battles Of Lexington And Concord 101. (AMERICAN REVOLUTION). Minutemen document signed. Newbury Massachusetts, April 11, 1775. One sheet of paper, 6-1/4 by 5-3/4 inches, manuscript in ink on recto and verso. $9200. Very scarce and desirable receipt signed by 11 minutemen in Newbury, Massachusetts, on April 11, 1775, an intriguing artifact of the Revolutionary War era. The document reads “Received of Capt. Gerrish by the hand of Mr. Eliphalet Kilbon the sum affixed to our respective names in the within, Newbury, April 11, 1775” and is signed by John Cheney, Oliver Goodridge, Abraham Sawyer, Abner Woodman, John Carneige, Jedediah Currier, Nath. Pearson, Nathan Adams, Jacob Hale, John Noyes, and Enoch Boynton. Several of these names are penned on the verso, in a uniform hand, with payment amounts noted next to each man’s name. “A vital and necessary force, playing a crucial role in… the Revolutionary War” (Independence Hall Association) Massachusetts was officially declared to be in a state of rebellion in February, 1775. In late March of 1775, John Hancock, president of the Provincial Congress of Massachusetts, “declaring that the people of Massachusetts were threatened by a powerful army, formally called upon them to prepare to defend themselves to the uttermost. Certain units of the Massachusetts militia were designated as minutemen, and instructed to go into swift action in the event that Gage’s troops came out of Boston on the offensive” (Alden, A History of the American Revolution, 173). The British garrison attempted to act on its orders to disarm the rebels and arrest their leaders, especially Hancock and Samuel Adams, which led to the Battles of Lexington and Concord on April 19, 1775, scarcely more than a week after this particular pay receipt was signed. Faint fold lines, mild edge-wear, archival tape reinforcement in three places on verso. An extremely good and scarce Revolutionary War document. au t um n 2014 | americana 88 massachuset ts general court “[We] Urge You… To Exert Every Nerve In This Glorious Struggle; For Should You For Any Reason Quit Your Posts, And Disgracefully Turn Your Backs On Your Enemies, Wild Carnage, Barbarous And Bloody Desolation Must Spread Like A Hideous Torrent Over Your Ruined Country”: A Remarkable November 1776 Broadside Address To The Massachusetts Soldiers Fighting The Revolutionary War 102. (AMERICAN REVOLUTION) MASSACHUSETTS GENERAL COURT. In the House of Representatives, November 1, 1776. Ordered, That the following ADDRESS from the General Court of this State, to the Officers and private Soldiers who are gone from thence and are serving in the American Army. Boston, 1776. Broadside, handsomely framed, entire piece measures 17 by 23 inches. $22,000. A rare November 1, 1776 broadside address issued by the Massachusetts government as a message of inspiration and encouragement to the Massachusetts troops fighting in the Continental Army with a warning of the grave dangers that will befall them and their families if they quit their posts. On October 31, 1776, the Massachusetts House of Representatives appointed four men to the committee to write this address to the “officers and private soldiers belonging to this State, and now serving in the American Army.” (Joseph Hawley, one of Massachusetts’ most important patriots, as well as a close and influential friend and frequent correspondent of both Samuel and John Adams, was a major contributor.) On the afternoon of the next day, November 1, their address was accepted, and on the 2nd it was ordered that “2000 hand-bills” of it be printed for the “When the tyrants of the earth began soldiers. The address gives the soldiers stirring reminders of the reasons they are fighting the war: “When the tyrants of the earth began to transgress the to transgress the sacred lines of sacred line of property, and claim their fellow men as slaves… men began to take the field of battle on behalf of freedom…. Our venerable ancestors came property, and claim their fellow men to this land when it was a savage and dangerous wilderness, terrible to the civilized eye. Here they toiled and bled, with the pleasing hope of their posterity’s enjoying that freedom for which they encountered every difficulty, as slaves… men began to take the field and braved every danger… But the King and Parliament of Great-Britain have been fatally persuaded to claim this whole continent, with its three millions of of battle on behalf of freedom…” inhabitants, as their own property… You have gallantly taken the field, and the salvation of your country, the happiness of future generations, as well as your own, depends upon your noble exertions.” The soldiers are assured that they will be sent supplies, but then are warned what will happen if they desert their posts: “Should you for any reason quit your posts, and disgracefully turn your backs on your enemies, wild carnage, barbarous and bloody desolation must spread like a hideous torrent over your ruined country.” American Revolutionary broadsides, especially war-related ones printed during 1776, are extremely rare and desirable. “Only a small percentage of the total number of broadsides from the era of the American Revolution has survived.” (Lowance & Bumgardner, ix-x). No copies of this broadside have appeared at auction in the last 30 years. Some browning and spotting, reinforcement to separations at old folds. 89 au t um n 2014 | a m eric a n a thomas jefferson “Books As Well As Other Things Have Limits To Their Value Beyond Which We Would Not Go”: 1819 Autograph Letter Signed By Jefferson To His Bookseller 103. JEFFERSON, Thomas. Autograph letter signed. Monticello, April 11, 1819. Single leaf of laid paper (measures 7-3/4 by 7-3/4 inches) in manuscript on the recto; letter matted and framed with portrait, entire piece measures 22-1/2 by 21-1/2 inches. $48,000. 1819 autograph letter written and signed by Jefferson, penned in Monticello, written to his bookseller John Laval, musing on book collecting. “By 1814… Jefferson had John Laval took over the Universal Book-Store in Philadelphia from his friend, the acquired the largest personal French-born Nicolas Gouin Dufief, some time after 1819. Dufief, America’s first antiquarian bookseller, had handled the sale of Franklin’s library, and the company collection of books in the United issued catalogues, one of which Jefferson has just received: “In the moment of my setting out on a journey I receive Mr. Dufief’s catalogue for 1819 for which I presume I States…” (Library of Congress) have to thank you. Having had time to run over the first pages only I mark in pa. 13 a copy of Scapula’s Lexicon printed at Coll. Allobr. 1616 called 8vo but I presume it is small 4to as I believe there has never been an edition so small as 8vo printed. Be pleased to send me this copy. If well wrapped in paper it may come by mail.” He asks for the prices of two further items, and complains, “It is a pity the prices of the books had not been printed. We are afraid to call for a book on seeing it’s title only, as books as well as other things have limits to their value beyond which we would not go.” Letter backed with stiff paper, with evidence of prior mounting on verso. Signature bold and clear. Fine condition. au t um n 2014 | americana 90 john adams “Received… Compensation As President Of The United States”: Rare 1799 Autograph Document Signed By John Adams As President, A Receipt Form Entirely Penned And Signed By Him Acknowledging Payment For His Service As President, 104. ADAMS, John. Autograph document signed. Quincy, March 4, 1799. Original leaf (41/2 by 8-inches) in manuscript on the recto only (window-matted on leaf, total 6 by 9-inches); framed with engraved portrait, entire piece measures 14 by 19-inches. $19,000. Rare March 4, 1799 autograph document signed by John Adams as America’s second president, entirely penned by him from his home in Quincy with his date of March 4, 1799, Adams’ “Form of Receipt” covering payment in “Compensation as President of the United States,” leaving a space for Meredith, Treasurer of the United States, to supply the authorized amount. This very rare autograph document reveals the fundamentally hands-on nature of this pragmatic Founding Father. In March 1797, when Adams moved into the President’s House in Philadelphia following his inauguration, he was immediately dismayed by the sheer cost of the office. “Rent for the house was an exorbitant $2,700 a year, plus another $2,500 for carriages and horses… Adams worried that on his salary of $25,000, it would be impossible to make ends meet. They would be more ‘pinched’ than ever in their lives he warned Abigail…’ Yet not a word could they say. ‘We “Patriotism burned in Adams must stand our ground as long as we can.’ To no one but her could ever complain.” Washington, much wealthier than Adams, had first refused like a blue flame.” (McCullough) a salary but, not wanting to set a precedent, took a smaller amount. In March 1799 Adams returned home to Quincy, possibly to reduce the daunting costs of the presidency, but certainly to avoid summers in Philadelphia in which persistent waves of yellow fever shut down Congress. “Convinced he could run the government as well from Quincy as at Philadelphia, Adams stretched his stay at home from late March to September, fully seven months… He worked dutifully… If there were delays in the system, they were nearly always at Philadelphia, not at his end” (526). The document reads in full: “Form of Receipt, Received of Samuel Meredith Treasurer of the United States by the hands of Benjamin Lincoln Collector of Boston [blank space] Dollars on amount of my Compensation as President of the United States to the 4 [sic] of march 1799. For which I have signed Duplicate Receipts. John Adams, Quincy [blank space] 1799.” Engraved portrait containing a facsimile signature covered by the mat. A fine signed document handsomely matted and framed. 91 au t um n 2014 | a m eric a n a george a . custer “As You Accuse Me Of Writing Short Letters I Concluded To Commence One On As Large A Sheet Of Paper As I Could Find”: Rare And Very Lengthy Four-Page 1859 Handwritten Signed Letter From Custer To A Female Childhood Friend 105. CUSTER, George A. Autograph letter signed. West Point, New York, April 6, 1859. Four unlined pages (attached) measuring 8 by 10 inches, with original envelope bearing wax seal. $9500. Rare, early, and lengthy four-page 1859 autograph letter written entirely in George Armstrong Custer’s hand (and signed “Armstrong”) to a female friend lamenting the reinstated five-year academic program at West Point, asking about mutual friends at home, discussing his preparations for exams, and joking about the length of the letter while requesting one of similar length, accompanied by original hand-addressed and wax-sealed mailing envelope. The letter reads in part: “I received and read your welcome letter with great pleasure, and as you accuse me of writing short letters I concluded to commence one on as large a sheet of paper as I could find... the Secretary of War had changed the course here from five to four years early last fall, we were all very much pleased with that change but day before yesterday the Secretary of War transmitted the order to change the course back again to five years notwithstanding the academic Board were strongly in favor of the four years course, several cadets are going to resign in consequence of this change... we are still hoping that the War Department will be induced to “One of the best-known figures in change the course again... Is William Strong as attentive as ever to Lottie or has she transfered (sic) her smiles to some more favored one... Our American history and popular mythology.” examination will commence upon the first day of June, my time is now employed in studying Differential & Integral Calculus, French, Rhetoric, (PBS/The West Film Project and WETA) Drawing & Painting, together with Riding at Cavalry drills, Fencing and Infantry and Artillery drills, we drill every evening with cannon that will carry balls three miles and a half. We will commence with the flying artillery in a few days... Do you remember those handbills that Henry & I posted on the Seminary one night. I do not supposed he had any idea of the authors of it... I will expect a “real long” letter in answer to this, which will contain all news of the young folks... Hoping to hear from you soon I remain—truly your friend. &c Armstrong.” Despite wavering by the War Department on the matter of program length at West Point, the outbreak of the Civil War ultimately decided the matter: the term was cut from five to four years in 1861 to allow more officers. Custer, more soldier than scholar, was among those graduates happy to leave for the battlefield—he graduated last in his class. When he entered the U.S. Service, he was commissioned a second lieutenant in the 2nd U.S. Cavalry, where he quickly became known for his daring—and often reckless— exploits. The recipient of this letter was Minnie St. John, later Loranger, a lifelong resident of Custer’s adopted hometown, Monroe, Michigan. Original postal markings and owner pencil notations to envelope. Envelope a bit worn. Letter lovely and fine with only original folding creases and ink smudges. au t um n 2014 | americana 92 “The First Full-Scale History Of This War By An American” 106. GORDON, William. The History of the Rise, Progress, and Establishment of the Independence of the United States of America. London, 1788. Four volumes. Octavo, contemporary full brown tree calf gilt rebacked with original spines laid down. $16,000. First edition of Gordon’s contemporary 1788 History, a landmark work by “one of the most impartial and reliable of the numerous historians of the American Revolution” (Sabin), extensively researched with the aid of Jefferson, John Adams and Washington, among others, containing nine engraved folding maps of the United States, with scarce “List of Subscribers” including Founding Fathers Washington, Jefferson and John Adams, in contemporary calf boards. In researching this groundbreaking History, “Gordon took copious notes throughout the war... he wrote and spoke incessantly with ‘those in the know,’ then incorporated what they told him within his narrative” (Raphael, Founding Myths, 252, 330n). Among those he contacted was Jefferson, who was an early subscriber and provided Gordon with personal accounts of the war. John Adams similarly wrote Gordon in 1777, saying: “Your design, Sir, of collecting materials for a history of the rise, progress, and issue of the American Revolution, is liberal and generous; and, as you will find it a laborious undertaking, you ought to be encouraged.” Adams aided by suggesting Gordon contact the Secretary of State, the War Office and other key sources. Similarly, “Washington agreed to amplify Gordon’s research with personal reminiscences of fellow officers” (Ellis). “The first full-scale history of this war by an American” (Howes). Armorial bookplates. Tiny bit of marginalia. Text and maps fresh with only light scattered foxing, expert paper repair to one folding map at stub, expert restoration to boards. A splendid about-fine copy, scarce in contemporary boards. “A Firm Foundation Must Be Laid For The Security Of Our Rights And Liberties…” 107. (BOSTON MASSACRE) HANCOCK, John. An Oration; Delivered March 5th, 1774... to commemorate the bloody Tragedy of the Fifth of March, 1770. Boston, March, 1774. Octavo, original side-stitched sheets. $12,800. Scarce first periodical appearance, in the March issue of Isaiah Thomas’ Royal American Magazine, published around March 24th, apparently about the same time as this first periodical appearance. Angry American colonists carried an undimmed recollection of the bloody 1770 Boston Massacre, seeing it as a turning point in “a deliberate assault of power upon liberty” (Bailyn, 117). “The Massacre— it was called that almost immediately— compelled attention all over again to the question of what British power was doing in America” (Middlekauff, 206). Hancock’s powerful 1774 oration addresses fears of standing armies by describing them as “men who have lost or given up their own liberties,” and calls for the creation of a “Congress of Deputies from the several Houses of Assembly on the Continent… At such a Congress, a firm foundation may be laid for the security of our Rights and Liberties.” The first separate printing of Hancock’s oration appeared sometime around March 24th (the date it was advertised in the local newspapers), published in Boston by Edes and Gill (Evans 13314). Without the two engraved plates (as usual). Only a few scattered patches of foxing, tiny stab marks at left margins with remnant of original stitches, three small holes to pages 89-92 (not affecting Hancock’s oration). A near-fine copy uncut of a key Revolutionary War document. 1794 American Edition Of Jefferson’s Notes On The State Of Virginia, The First American Edition To Include A Map “I Am Certain That We Never Would Have Survived The Eisenhower Landslide If It Had Not Been For The Effectiveness Of Our Organization”: Excellent 1952 Letter Signed By JFK 109. KENNEDY, John F. Typed letter signed. No place, 1952. One page, quarto, matted and framed with portrait. Entire piece measures 25-1/4 by 18-3/4 inches. $4500. Fine political letter signed by John F. Kennedy, written in 1952 shortly after winning election to the U.S. Senate, thanking a campaign organizer for his hard work and support during the campaign. Kennedy’s letter, written when he was a Massachusetts congressman, is addressed to “Andy,” and reads: “Since I have just returned from Europe, I have been delayed in telling you how much I appreciate all of your efforts during the past months of the campaign. I am certain that we never would have survived the Eisenhower landslide if it had not been for the effectiveness of our organization, an organization, in my opinion, which was the best that the state had ever seen. I fully realize that this victory was won by the people such as yourself who carried out the many arduous but necessary tasks which constitute political success, and I want you to know how grateful I am to you for all your assistance.” Eisenhower, running as a Republican, won the Presidential campaign in a landslide, which Kennedy refers to in this letter. Fine condition. a m eric a n a “The Notes on Virginia laid the foundations of Jefferson’s high contemporary reputation as a universal scholar and of his present fame as a pioneer American scientist… This extraordinarily informing and generally interesting book may still be consulted with profit about the geography and productions, the social and political life, of 18th-century Virginia. With ardent patriotism as well as zeal for truth, Jefferson combated the theories of Buffon and Raynal in regard to the degeneracy of animal and intellectual life in America, and he manifested great optimism in regard to the future of the country, but he included strictures on slavery and the government of Virginia” (ANB). The book was first privately printed edition of 200 copies in 1785 in Paris. A poor translation into French followed in 1786. This second American edition contains the famous Samuel Lewis map of Virginia for the first time. Early owner signatures. Interior generally fresh with light scattered foxing, expert paper repair to chart, map and last four leaves with light expert cleaning. A scarce extremely good copy, handsomely bound. | Second American edition, with large folding map of Virginia by Samuel Lewis (not issued with the first American edition) and folding chart listing Indian tribes, handsomely bound. au t um n 2014 108. JEFFERSON, Thomas. Notes on the State of Virginia. Philadelphia: 1794. Octavo, 19th-century three-quarter red morocco gilt. $8500. 93 au t um n 2014 | americana 94 kennedy assassination “President Kennedy Has Been Shot”: Remarkable Archive Of Historic Breaking News Of The Kennedy Assassination On Original Associated Press International Teletype Sheets Most Scarce With Fourteen Original Wire Photos From November 22, 1963 110. (KENNEDY ASSASSINATION). Original United Press International teletype reports of the Kennedy assassination. Dallas, Texas, November 22, 1963. Original teletype rolls, divided into over 100 segments, totaling over 200 feet. $14,000. Original United Press International teletype from November 22, 1963 to March 1964, with breaking news of the Kennedy assassination, including reports of Kennedy’s death, Lyndon Johnson’s inauguration, the capture of Lee Harvey Oswald, his killing by Jack Ruby, reaction from world leaders, as well as the opening stages of the Warren Commission hearings and Jack Ruby’s murder trial. Offered with 14 original wire photos, including the iconic Bob Jackson photo of Ruby shooting Oswald, together with several less often seen images from the same incident, as well as a touching portrait of John Kennedy, Jr. “We were working in one of the | a m eric a n a The 14 wire photos that are included with the archive, while mostly concerning the events of November 22nd and its aftermath, also chronicle what would have been the lead news of the day, had Kennedy not been shot and killed — the tragic fire in a Fitchville, Ohio nursing home in which 65 of its residents perished. The teletype stands as an amazing historical record of one of the most tragic events in American history, allowing the reader to observe how the nation and the world learned the news — in real time. Some expected tears at margins, creases, light toning, else very good condition overall. 95 au t um n 2014 Recovered by a Xavier University student working part-time in the newsroom of the Cincinnati Post and Times-Star, the teletype dispatches chronicle some of worst moments of the nation’s life the momentous events of those terrible four days in November 1963. As common to most news bureaus, teletype printouts would be ripped from the back then and we didn’t know what machine as they came across the wire and distributed to the appropriate reporter. The teletype features updates on the events of the first several hours after Kennedy’s slaying in Dallas, capturing the whirlwind of confusion that to make of it.” (Bob Schieffer) surrounded the days events: “UPR 82 URGENT (SUB KENNEDY) (DALLAS)— -PRESIDENT KENNEDY HAS BEEN SHOT. HE IS PERHAPS FATALLY WOUNDED…THE PRESIDENT’S BODY WAS LIMP … CRADLED IN THE ARMS OF HIS WIFE. HE WAS RUSHED TO PARKLAND HOSPITAL …” The report also notes the initial confusion as to the origin of the shots which helped give rise to countless conspiracy theories: “WITNESSES SAID THERE WERE THREE LOUD BURSTS OF GUNFIRE. MOTORCYCLE POLICE ESCORTING THE PRESIDENT QUICKLY LEAPED FROM THEIR BIKES AND RACED UP A GRASSY HILL … SOME SECRET SERVICE AGENTS THOUGHT THE SHOTS CAME FROM AN AUTOMATIC WEAPON…” Also covered is the capture and eventual slaying of Lee Harvey Oswald, with a good deal of copy dedicated to the reactions of leaders throughout the country and around the world— even the Soviet Union. 96 americana “We Must Not Close Our Eyes To The Certainty That Unemployment…Will Force A Certain Number Of Men Over The Line From Honesty To Dishonesty, From An Orderly Life To One Of Violence” au t um n 2014 | 111. ROOSEVELT, Franklin Delano. Typed manuscript of a speech. No place, 1930. Quarto, one page, matted and framed with portrait. Entire piece measures 20 by 16 inches. $7500. Page of a typed manuscript of an FDR speech addressing unemployment, poverty and government relief in America, with the President’s numerous penciled emendations. Handsomely framed. This page of manuscript from a Roosevelt speech reads in part, with Roosevelt’s penciled emendations in italics: “We must not close our eyes to the certainty that unemployment this winter will force a certain number of men over the line from honesty to dishonesty, from an orderly life to one of violence. Unemployment relief being carried out in the State of New York, at best, can do no more than prevent actual hunger and suffering. It cannot in one winter do more… Whenever there are sharp distinctions of inequality in fortune, men will be especially tempted to get by cleverness or strength what society at such a time as this and as now constituted denies them. It would be decent as well as wise for those upon whom fortune has smiled to make no parade of it… humor has worn thin when a man and his family have been out of work for months; they humanly resent all waste of money by those who still have large incomes. They know what it would buy for them, and wonder whether the rich man really understands and is doing his bit in the world of his fellow men.” Fine condition. Signed Original Photograph Of Franklin D. Roosevelt, Handsomely Framed 112. ROOSEVELT, Franklin D. Original Photograph Signed. No place, no date. Photograph measures 7-1/2 by 9-1/2 inches, matted and framed. Entire piece measures 12 by 15 inches. $4500. Original photograph portrait, signed by President Franklin D. Roosevelt on the lower margin. Photograph is imprinted “Ortho N.Y.” in the lower right corner. Fine condition. First Signed Limited Edition Of Theodore Roosevelt’s Outdoor Pastimes Of An American Hunter First signed limited edition, one of 260 copies signed by Roosevelt, with photographic frontispiece portrait and numerous photographic plates. 114. SMITH, William. The History of the Province of New-York, from the First Discovery to the Year M.DCC.XXXII. London: Thomas Wilcox, 1757. WITH: Continuation of the History of New York (Collections of the New-York Historical Society). New York, 1826. Two volumes. Quarto, 19th-century three-quarter brown calf rebacked; octavo, original half buff paper over pale blue boards, custom slipcases. $6000. First edition of “the first and classic history of New York” (Streeter), with early 19thcentury re-engraved frontispiece view of Oswego on Lake Ontario, together with Smith’s Continuation, published posthumously by the New York Historical Society. Loyalist William Smith, Justice of the province of New York, left the country after the Revolution to accept a post as Chief Justice of Lower Canada. While he had finished his history of New York nearly up to the present time, he was persuaded “by forcible reasons” to limit the first edition of his history to the year 1732. The unpublished remainder appeared for the first time in 1826, as Volume IV of the Collections of the New-York Historical Society. Smith based his landmark work, a cornerstone of colonial history, “chiefly on the Provincial Laws, the Minutes of the Council, the Journals of the General Assembly and other government records” (Sabin 84566). In this copy, the frontispiece view of Oswego is a later version, re-engraved in Albany by D. Vaughan and printed by Gavit & Duthie. Bookbinder’s ticket. Faint stamp on title page. Text lightly toned, a few short tears along folds of frontispiece; scattered foxing to Continuation, outer paper hinges split, cords holding firm. Lovely copies of this seminal history. a m eric a n a “A Cornerstone Of Colonial History”: First Editions Of The First History Of New York (1757) And Its Continuation (1826) | Roosevelt colorfully relates his adventures hunting bear, deer, cougar and other game in such locales as the Rocky Mountains and Yellowstone Park. “Like Audubon, William Elliott, and Judge Caton, Roosevelt liked to chase deer with horses and hounds: ‘To be able to ride through woods and over rough country at full speed, rifle or shotgun in hand, and then to leap off and shoot at a running object is to show that one has the qualities which made the cavalry of Forrest so formidable in the Civil War.’ This volume also contains an excellent chapter on ‘Books on Big Game’ in which Roosevelt reveals his admiration for two other giants among deer hunters: Judge Caton and T.S. Van Dyke” (Wegner, 234). Preceded by the first trade edition. Wheelock, 10. Phillips, 320. Interior fine; only lightest wear to extremities. Spine of exceedingly scarce brown paper dust jacket renewed, with some expert restoration to flap folds. A beautiful copy. au t um n 2014 113. ROOSEVELT, Theodore. Outdoor Pastimes of an American Hunter. New York, 1905. Octavo, original three-quarter tan pigskin recased. $8200. 97 au t um n 2014 | americana 98 the child ’s rights 99 “Recognizing That Mankind Owes To The Child The Best That It Has To Give…”: Geneva Declaration Of Children’s Rights, Signed By Eisenhower, Churchill And Montgomery au t um n 2014 115. (CHURCHILL, Winston S.; EISENHOWER, Dwight D.; MONTGOMERY, Bernard Law) BROMAGE, William (artist). Document signed. The Child’s Rights. No place, September 1945. Handwritten document on vellum (12-1/2 by 16 inches). Framed. $29,000. | Most probably produced for a fund-raising or charitable event, the document reads: “The Child’s Rights. The Declaration of Geneva, drafted in 1922 by Eglantyne Jebb, Founder of the Save the Children Fund, has been endorsed by the leading statesmen of many countries, including successive Prime Ministers of Great Britain, and Prime Ministers of the Overseas British Dominions, and was “The child that is hungry must be fed; adopted by the Assembly of the League of Nations in 1924 as the League’s Charter of Child Welfare. By the present declaration of the the child that is sick must be nursed; rights of the child, commonly known as the ‘Declaration of Geneva,’ men & women of all nations recognizing that Mankind owes to the Child the the child that is backward must be best that it has to give, declare and accept it as their duty that, beyond helped; the delinquent child must be and above all considerations of race, nationality or creed: I. The child must be given the means requisite for its normal development both reclaimed; and the orphan & the waif materially and spiritually. II. The child that is hungry must be fed; the child that is sick must be nursed; the child that is backward must be must be sheltered and succoured.” helped; the delinquent child must be reclaimed; and the orphan & the waif must be sheltered and succoured. III. The child must be the first to receive relief in times of distress. IV. The child must be put in a position to earn a livelihood & must be protected against every form of exploitation. V. The child must be brought up in the consciousness that its talents must be devoted to the service of its fellow men.” Set in an illuminated historiated border and signed by the artist at the bottom. Fine condition. a m eric a n a Rare and lovely handwritten calligraphic document on vellum listing universal rights for children, signed by Churchill, Eisenhower and Montgomery just four months after the end of the war in Europe. A magnificent production. | george s . pat ton Photographs Inscribed And Signed By Pershing, Marshall, The Prince Of Luxembourg, And Other Military Leaders To General George S. Patton, Annotated By His Son au t um n 2014 americana 100 116. (PATTON, George S.) (PERSHING, John J.) (MARSHALL, George C.). Archive of 13 photographs, ten inscribed to General Patton. No place, no date. Ten signed photographs inscribed by the subject to General Patton, each mounted on a 10-1/2 by 14-1/4-inch sheet of cardstock, all but one mounted on recto and verso. $13,500. Fascinating annotated archive of 13 photographs, ten of which are inscribed to General George S. Patton, Jr., by such military luminaries as John J. Pershing, George C. Marshall, and Prince Felix of Luxembourg in remembrance of the Battle of the Bulge. Patton’s son George S. Patton IV has annotated several images, noting the influence and importance of the subject in his father’s life and military career. The archive includes photographs inscribed by John J. Pershing (also annotated by Patton’s son, George Patton IV); George C. Marshall; Prince Felix of Luxembourg (annotated); Charles P. Summerall (Patton’s artillery instructor at West Point and Chief of Staff of the Army from 1926-1930); Herbert B. Crosby (Chief of the Cavalry from 1926-30); James G. Harbord (General Pershing’s Chief of Staff during World War I and only inscribed to Patton IV as Patton III; there was no Patton III); Walter C. Short (U.S. military commander responsible for the defense of military installations in Hawaii at the time of Pearl Harbor; annotated); Fox Conner (operation officer for the AEF during World War I and Eisenhower’s mentor); Stuart Heintzelman (general staff officer with the AEF; curiously annotated “an exception… no great and true friend”); and one unidentified major general. 101 au t um n 2014 | a m eric a n a george s . pat ton General George S. Patton Jr.’s Personal Copy Of Saladin, Thrice Signed By Him 117. (PATTON, George S.) ROSEBAULT, Charles J. Saladin, Prince of Chivalry. New York, 1930. Octavo, original green cloth; custom clamshell box. $12,500. First edition of Rosebault’s biography of Saladin, who captured Jerusalem and then fought Richard the Lionheart’s crusaders, this especially memorable association copy belonging to General George S. Patton Jr., signed by him on book’s spine and front board, and inscribed by him on the half title in the year of publication, “G.S. Patton Jr, May 5, ‘30.” “General George S. Patton Jr. has earned a place in the pantheon of authentic American heroes…. [Yet] his great success on the battlefield did not come about by chance…. He read voraciously… During the interwar years Patton consulted an eclectic list of the famous and the lesser known, ranging from Napoleon and Clausewitz to du Picq, Jomini, Cromwell, Xenophon and Frederick the Great (D’Este, Patton, 3-4, 317-18). This rare association copy of Rosebault’s Saladin—Patton’s own copy from that period—is thrice signed by him, as was his custom: once on the spine, once on the front cover, and signed and dated inside the book itself, in this case on the half title. Patton served in Washington, DC in the Office of the Chief of Cavalry, Plans and Training from 1928-31. Saladin was the Muslim sultan of Egypt, Syria, Yemen and Palestine. In wars against the Christian crusaders, he achieved great success with the capture of Jerusalem in 1187, ending 88 years of occupation by the Franks. Pope Gregory VIII issued a papal bull proposing the Third Crusade to regain the Holy City for the Christians. It was led by Richard the Lionheart. Patton’s library, which was almost entirely inherited by his son, Major General George S. Patton IV, was given to West Point, with just a small portion of books inherited by other descendants or friends. Text generally clean, with faint marginal dampstaining along a few edges. Covers and spine dampstained from a fire in Patton’s house, with restoration to spine ends. Good condition, rare and desirable from Patton’s military library. au t um n 2014 | americana 102 “If He Does Not Go I Will Go Any Way For This May Be The Last War And I Want To Get In One At Least”: 28-Year-Old Second Lieutenant George Patton Writes To His Mother, 1914 118. PATTON, George S. Autograph letter signed. Pride’s Crossing, [Massachusetts], August 1914. One leaf, folded once to make four pages, 5 by 6-3/4 inches, written on three pages. $6500. Revealing three-page autograph letter signed by 28-year-old Second Lieutenant George S. Patton, Jr., to his mother, telling her that retiring Army Chief of Staff Gen. Leonard Wood told him that if he is sent to Europe as an observer during the World War, he will take Patton with him, noting that if General Wood does not go, “I will go any way for this may be the last war and I want to get in one at least.” This letter reads in part: “Dear Mama: I went to N.Y. Sunday and saw Gen. [Leonard] Wood and asked him about granting a leave he said it was possible but asked that I wait two weeks by that time he will know whether or not he is going as an observer and if he goes he will try to take me with him. The fact of his going and of his taking me are both secrets so do not mention them.” Fine condition. “It Is General Patton’s Desire That Tasks Be Assigned And That They Be Rehearsed And Rehearsed By Those Charged With The Execution… It Is Directed That Training Be Conducted In An Atmosphere Of Combat Reality…”: Secret Official Correspondence File Of Patton’s Deputy Commander, With His Letters To Patton And Other Generals, Including An “Ok/ P” From General Patton 119. (PATTON, George S.) KEYES, Geoffrey. Archive—Secret Official Correspondence File, with related documents and insignia. North Africa; Italy, November 28, 1942-August 28, 1943. Eighty-seven pages, Mostly 8-1/2 by 10-1/2 on lightweight paper, attached at the top to manila file folder, 9 by 11-3/4 inches, stamped in red “SECRET.” $7500. Secret Official Correspondence File of Patton’s Deputy Commander, then-Major General Geoffrey Keyes, with his letters to Patton and other Generals—Including an “O.K./ P.” from General Patton on a 1943 request from French Vice Admiral François Michellier. Also with official letters “For the Commanding General” and from Keyes written by him during Operation Torch (North Africa) and Operation Husky (Sicily), with related insignia. From Lieutenant General Keyes’ estate. The W.T.F. – Western Task Force – was commanded by Major General George S. Patton, Jr. Aimed at Casablanca, it was one of three amphibious task forces assigned to seize the key ports and airports of Morocco and Algiers simultaneously. Consisting of the U.S. 2nd Armored Division and the U.S. 3rd and 9th Infantry Divisions, 35,000 troops were in a convoy of over 100 ships providing logistic support for the North African campaign. Maj. Gen. Keyes was Patton’s Deputy Commander. OPERATION TORCH was the invasion by American and British forces of French North Africa during the North African campaign in November 1942. OPERATION HUSKY was the Allied invasion of Sicily in July-August 1943. From the estate of Lieutenant General Geoffrey Keyes. Signs of use, but overall in excellent condition. 120. RIDGWAY, Matthew. Photograph signed. Normandy, June 6, 1944. Vintage photographic print, measuring 10 by 8 inches. $2500. “Something Has To Happen To People’s Souls Before They Are Going To Give The Rights Of Citizenship To All The People Of Our Country, Regardless Of Color Or Creed”: Extraordinary Signed Eleanor Roosevelt Letter 121. ROOSEVELT, Eleanor. Typed letter signed. Washington, DC, February 19, 1944. Large octavo, one and a half pages, matted and framed with portrait. Entire piece measures 23-1/2 by 14-1/2 inches. $7200. Fine and revealing 1944 Eleanor Roosevelt typed letter discussing civil rights in America, signed by her. Handsomely framed with a portrait. Roosevelt’s letter reads in part: “I quite agree with you that a year of this type of contact would be good for your young people, but it would not solve the colored question because you would find them setting up separate projects just as they are doing in the Army today for colored and white. Something has to happen to people’s souls before they are going to give the rights of citizenship to all the people of our country, regardless of color or creed. That does not mean you have to ask them to dinner. It only means giving them the rights that go with citizenship. The right to an equal opportunity for an education. The right to equal justice before the law. The right to obtain a job according to their ability to hold it.” In a postscript, the First Lady has written, “Mrs. Levy practically agreed she would give them a monthly subscription as I do.” Fine condition. a m eric a n a On the night of June 5, 1944, Matthew B. Ridgway (18951993), in command of the 82nd Airborne Division, parachuted with his men behind German lines in Normandy. The 82nd Airborne helped disrupt German communications in the area, paving the way for the successful landing of Allied forces on the beaches of Normandy the following day. A career military man, General Ridgway converted the 82nd division into the 82nd Airborne and was responsible for the planning and execution of the first major airborne assault by the U.S. Army, the attack on Sicily in 1943. Photograph bears surface creases that do not detract from the overall presentation. Very good condition. | A dramatic and unusual official United States Army photograph of American Marines on Omaha Beach on June 6, 1944, inscribed and signed on the reverse by one of D-Day’s major players, 82nd Airborne Commander Matthew B. Ridgway: “M G. Ridgway Major General, Comdg 82d Airborne Division D-Day, 06 June 1944.” 103 au t um n 2014 Dramatic D-Day Photograph, Signed By 82nd Airborne Commander General Matthew Ridgway au t um n 2014 | americana 104 geoffrey keyes The Creation Of West Germany, 1945: Unique Hand-Colored And Annotated Map Outlining The Division Of Germany According To The Berlin Declaration, Produced By The Military Just After Germany’s Surrender 122. (WORLD WAR II) KEYES, Geoffrey, Lt. Gen. Archive: Hand-colored and annotated map outlining the division of Germany; 25 contemporary V-Mail letters from Keyes to his wife. Waiblingen-bei-Stuttgart, Germany, June 1945. Broadside, map measures 22 by 29 inches. V-Mail letters each measure 4-1/4 by 5-1/4 inches. $18,000. Lieutenant General Geoffrey Keyes’ unique hand-colored and annotated map outlining the division of Germany per the Berlin Declaration, produced just after Germany’s unconditional surrender, along with 25 contemporary letters by Keyes to his wife. “People of this world, look upon this city and see that you should not and cannot abandon this city and this people.” It was agreed at the Yalta Conference, held in Crimea, (Ernst Reuter, 1948) February 4-11, 1945, that after the war, Germany would be split into four occupied zones: American, British, French and Russian. On May 7, 1945, Germany signed an unconditional surrender at Allied headquarters in Reims, France, to take effect the following day. The Berlin Declaration of June 5, 1945, confirmed the division of Allied-occupied Germany into four occupation zones according to the Yalta Conference. 105 a m eric a n a Also present are 25 pages of V-mail, each 4-1/2 by 5-1/4 inches, from Lieutenant General Keyes to his wife, May-August 1945. Excerpts: “The capitulation of the Germans yesterday has us all on the hump—just as much so as while we were still fighting… We are still awfully busy even if the fighting has ceased on this front… VE Day!! Now if we can quickly wind up the Jap affair we can really relax… We move to Salzburg this week… Well here we are installed in the Archbishop’s Palace sweetheart each room is large enough for a battalion almost… flew to 3d Army to attend the homecoming ceremonies for Gen. Patton. It really was a great show and he was in rare form – Had a nice visit with him… With the approaching end of the Jap war it will certainly be open season on generals!” From the estate of Lieutenant General Geoffrey Keyes. Map folded into quarters, with a few minor wrinkles, pinholes at corners from posting it on a wall or bulletin board. Near-fine condition, an exceptional archive. | Eight areas are outlined by hand in various colors. There are 17 landkreis at the western and southern borders of this map which are not outlined. These areas are in the French occupied zone. France was not represented at Yalta and Russia would only agree to a separate French occupation zone “within the British and American zones.” It is possible that when this map was printed, it was not yet determined if the 17 non-outlined landkreis were American. The four divisions were not confirmed until the Berlin Declaration on June 5, 1945, the day after this map was published. The French zone includes the stadtkreis Baden-Baden and Bavaria. The French zone bordered mostly France and Switzerland, but also small parts of Belgium, Luxembourg, and Austria. (Included is a color photocopy of the four occupied zones indicating the area depicted in the Administrative Map of WesternGermany here offered.) au t um n 2014 The map is titled “Administrative Map / Western-Germany ” and dated “4 June 1945.” The landkreise (rural district), stadtkreis (urban district within landkreis), and land boundaries (made up of adjoining stadtkreis) are noted. Identified with flags, there are three Region Headquarters (Darmstadt, Marburg, Stuttgart) and five R.B. Headquarters (Frankfurt, Kassel, Wiesbaden, Mannheim, Karlsruhe). geoffrey keyes americana Winner Of The Distinguished Service Medal With Two Oak Leaf Clusters, Silver Star With Oak Leaf Cluster, Legion Of Merit, Bronze Star: Lieutenant General Geoffrey Keyes’ Uniform, Cap, And Overcoat, With Related Letters And Documents au t um n 2014 | 106 123. (WORLD WAR II) KEYES, Geoffrey, Lt. Gen. World War II Officer’s Uniform, Cap, Overcoat, with related letters and documents. No place, 1942-45. Archive: military uniform, cap, wool overcoat; related letters and documents. $20,000. Well-preserved archive of three-star World War II Lieutenant General Geoffrey Keyes’ military uniform, cap, and wool overcoat, with many related letters and document—including his appointments signed by Woodrow Wilson and others—and original photographs of him in uniform with Dwight D. Eisenhower and Harry S. Truman. During World War II, Keyes was Chief of Staff, 2nd Armored Division (1940-1942), Commanding General 9th Armored Division (1942), Deputy Commanding General Western Task Force [North Africa] under Gen. George S. Patton, Jr. (1942-1943), Deputy Commanding General I Armored Corps [North Africa] under Gen. Patton (1943), Deputy Commanding General 7th Army [Sicily] under Gen. Patton (1943), Commanding General Provisional Corps [Sicily] appointed by Gen. Patton (1943), Commanding General II Corps [Italy] (1943-1946). He accepted the surrender of Palermo, Sicily, on July 22, 1943. After the war, he served in Germany, Italy, and Austria until his retirement in 1950. This archive includes: (1) Keyes’ two-piece three-star uniform. (2) Keyes’ three-star khaki overseas cap. Included is a 10 by 7-1/4-inch photocopy of a January 1944 photograph taken in Italy, picturing Keyes, wearing this cap, with Lieutenant General George S. Patton, Jr. (3) Keyes’ military wool overcoat, double-breasted.. Included is a 4-1/2 by 3-3/4-inch photograph showing Keyes wearing this overcoat as he greets troops at Christmas. (4) President Woodrow Wilson appoints Geoffrey Keyes “First Lieutenant of Cavalry.” Partly Engraved Document Signed “Woodrow Wilson,” August 17, 1916. Blue War Office seal. (5) Ceremonial Tassel. (6) Small collection of promotion documents to various military ranks. (7) Special Orders No. 17, War Department, January 20, 1942, announcing the temporary appointment of Keyes to brigadier general. (8) Five original V-MAILS from Keyes to his wife. (9) Threequarter length photograph of Keyes as Commanding General II Corps, wearing the overseas cap here offered. (10) Bust photograph of Keyes in uniform wearing the three-star overseas cap here offered. (11) Original photograph of General of the Army Dwight D. Eisenhower and Keyes, circa 1946. (12) Original U.S. Army Photograph of President Harry S. Truman presenting a letter expressing congratulations and gratitude to Keyes. From the estate of Lieutenant General Geoffrey Keyes. Excellent condition. 107 au t um n 2014 The Sinking Of Japan’s “Golden Submarine”: Fascinating Archive Of Signed Statements And Reports Concerning The Successful Attack On Japanese Submarine I-52 In June, 1944, Which Was Carrying Over Two Tons Of Gold Bullion | 124. (WORLD WAR II). Archive related to the sinking of Japanese Submarine I-52. No place, 1944. Various sizes and formats, mostly quarto, many items staple-bound or in original wrappers. $5500. Longer than a football field, I-52 was a cargo submarine of the Imperial Japanese Navy used during World War II for a secret mission to occupied France. The I-52 had left Japan with 2.2 metric tons of gold, along with 228 tons of tin, molybdenum, and tungsten, 54 tons of raw rubber, and 3 tons of quinine. Unbeknownst to Tokyo and Berlin, the I-52’s route and cargo were known to the Allies, who had broken a host of Axis ciphers. On June 23, 1944, just after I-52 rendezvoused with a German sub in the mid-Atlantic, Lt. Cmdr. Jesse D. Taylor took off from the aircraft carrier “Bogue.” He dropped flares and two 500-pound bombs and watched as the submarine desperately sought to dive. Taylor, listening to undersea sounds radioed by acoustic buoys, heard an explosion and a metallic groan as the submarine lost air and sank with more than 100 men. AS Taylor’s patrol ended, he was relieved by Lt. William Gordon who, hearing faint propeller noises, dropped a second acoustic torpedo. The U.S. Navy credited both Taylor and Gordon with the sinking of Japan’s “Golden Submarine.” Fine condition. “With The Hope That He Will Find This Book… Reflective Of His Own Political Philosophy”: Signed Limited First Edition Of Mandate For Change, Warmly Inscribed By President Eisenhower To His Brother 125. EISENHOWER, Dwight D. The White House Years. Mandate for Change 1953-1956. Garden City, 1963. Thick octavo, original tan cloth, acetate dust jacket, slipcase. $11,000. Signed limited first edition, presentation/association copy, one of 1500 copies, this copy without a numbered limitation page, inscribed by Eisenhower in the year of publication on a tipped-in leaf: “For my eldest living brother, Edgar. With the hope that he will find this book interesting and accurate and—within reason—reflective of his own political philosophy. Devotedly, Ike. 14 October 1963.” Mandate for Change, the first of Eisenhower’s books on his presidency, covers the critical years of his first term, in which he dealt with issues such as the end of the Korean War, the Cold War, trouble in the Suez and the Rosenberg case. Attorney Edgar N. Eisenhower was the eldest of the five Eisenhower brothers. “The elder Eisenhower gained national attention during his brother’s presidency with conservative criticism of administration policies. But when Edgar criticized, the President wasn’t surprised. In fact, he quipped to reporters: ‘Edgar has been criticizing me since I was five years old,” (United Press International obituary). Book fine. Very light soiling to publisher’s slipcase. A fine inscribed copy with exquisite provenance. a m eric a n a Historically important archive of documents concerning the June 24, 1944 sinking by a U.S. bomber of the Japanese Submarine I-52, with a cargo bound for Nazi Germany which included over two tons of gold bullion. Includes signed statements of military and civilian personnel involved in the attack, including the statement of Lt. William Gordon, one of the two pilots credited with the sinking of Japan’s “Golden Submarine.” au t um n 2014 | americana 108 “The Most Famous Actress The World Has Seen”: Signed By Sarah Bernhardt, Limited Edition Of Her Memoirs, One Of Only 250 Copies 126. BERNHARDT, Sarah. Memories of My Life. New York, 1907. Thick octavo, original white cloth gilt, custom clamshell box. $4500. Limited first American edition of Bernhardt’s Memories of My Life, signed by her, scarce unnumbered copy, one of 250 in the limited “autograph edition,” with frontispiece and over 25 full-page illustrations, in original gilt-stamped cloth with comic mask blindstamped to the front board. This intimate account of Bernhardt’s life is “intensely readable… central to our knowledge of her life up to and through her first American tour of 1880-1881” (Gottlieb, Sarah Bernhardt). With frontispiece portrait and over 25 full-page illustrations. Issued the same year as the first American and English trade edition (the latter as My Double Life), no priority established. Dramatic Bibliography, 66. Interior very fresh and clean, only lightest soiling to cloth. A fine signed copy. Signed By Joe DiMaggio, Willie Mays, Ted Williams, Hank Aaron, Mickey Mantle, Sandy Koufax And Over 50 Hall Of Famers, Most Signed At Cooperstown, Scarce Association Copy Of Baseball’s 100 127. ALLEN, Maury. Baseball’s 100. New York, 1981. Tall octavo, original pictorial green wrappers. $6500. First edition of Maury Allen’s Baseball’s 100, his ranking of the top players in baseball history, a very scarce association copy containing nearly 100 signatures of baseball legends, including DiMaggio, Mantle, Aaron, Musial, Mays, Koufax, Berra, Seaver, Carew, Pee Wee Reese, Ted Williams, Whitey Ford, Brooks Robinson, and many more—including 59 Baseball Hall of Famers, some signing more than once, featuring signatures on the half title, title page, rear blanks and inner wrapper, and many on the players’ accompanying images. This scarce copy of Baseball’s 100 by famed sportswriter Allen is signed by 59 different Baseball Hall of Famers, most at Cooperstown, many signing on their full-page photographic image, including: Ted Williams, Stan Musial, Joe DiMaggio, Mickey Mantle, Rod Carew, Pete Rose, Yogi Berra, Whitey Ford, Tom Seaver, Johnny Bench, Lou Brock, Carl Yastrzemski, Rich Allen, Frank Robinson, Juan Marichal, Harmon Killebrew, Phil Rizzuto, Fred Lynn, Pee Wee Reese, Don Drysdale, Duke Snider, Catfish Hunter and many others. Ninety-eight signatures in all (including duplicates). Precedes the cloth edition. Owner inscription, occasional marginalia. A few of the signatures include inscriptions. Signatures and inscriptions clear and dark, interior generally fresh, slight edge-wear to wrappers. An extremely good association copy. 128. GARBO, Greta. Signature. No place, 1928. One page measuring 7 by 6-1/4 inches. $3000. “I Am Kind Of A Loner. I Hate To Get Mixed Up In A ‘Herd Of Thinking’”: Fine John Wayne Letter, Mentioning “The Millions Of People That Are Being Murdered And Mistreated In Vietnam And Cambodia,” Boldly Signed 129. WAYNE, John. Typed letter signed. Beverly Hills, California, June 22, 1978. One page, small quarto, matted and framed with portrait. Entire piece measures 17 by 14 inches. $5500. Excellent John Wayne letter in which he refers to himself as “kind of a loner,” boldly signed by him, handsomely framed with a photograph of Wayne in western garb, holding a rifle in one hand and maintaining contact with his holstered pistol with his other hand. The letter is addressed to Mrs. Nicole Lenzi, and reads: “I signed the photograph, but I did not sign the petition. The reason—I am kind of a loner. I hate to get mixed up in a ‘herd of thinking.’ There are so many inequalities that are more deserving of our attention. The millions of people that are being murdered and mistreated in Vietnam and Cambodia—we do nothing about that, so it’s hard for me to put my name to a petition to stop killing seals.” Framed in charcoal gray, black trim, and gilt. Shown with a photograph of Mr. Wayne wearing western garb, holding a rifle in one hand, and maintaining contact with his hip pistol with his other hand. Includes the original envelope. Fine condition. a m eric a n a MGM make-up man Cecil Holland appeared with Garbo in a cameo role in Mata Hari, and he was Make-Up Supervisor of Grand Hotel where Garbo spoke her iconic line: “I want to be alone.” Holland (1887-1973) acted in over 30 silent movies, mostly shorts, beginning in 1914. Being an expert in applying his own character make-up, Holland started doing make-up for other actors in the films in which he appeared, eventually leaving acting in favor of full-time make-up. He was the first head of the make-up department at MGM. Holland made his final appearance in film in his only talkie, Mata Hari, filmed in 1931. In the title role, Greta Garbo asked a blinded World War I soldier a question during a hospital visit to her lover, Ramon Novarro. Holland in a cameo role, was the blinded soldier. Lengthy 1913 inscription to Holland by Edison silent screen star Marc MacDermott on verso (no show-through). MacDermott inscription retraced to correct fading. Glossy cut-out photograph of MacDermott neatly affixed at lower left. Fine condition. | Rare inscribed Greta Garbo signature—“To Cecil Holland / Greta Garbo / 1928”—on an autograph album page with a photograph of the actress neatly cut from a larger glossy photograph affixed at right. 109 au t um n 2014 Greta Garbo Signs An Autograph For MGM Make-Up Man Cecil Holland, Who Later Appeared With Her In A Cameo Role In Mata Hari History, P hilosophy & R eligion magna carta “One Of The Central Documents In The History Of Western Civilization… The Symbol Of Political Liberty… The Foundation Of Modern Constitutional Government” 130. (MAGNA CARTA). Magna Carta in F… (London), 1529 (colophon dated 1539). Tall 12mo (2-1/2 by 5-1/2 inches), early 20th-century full gilt-paneled brown morocco gilt. $18,000. Rare early printing of the Magna Carta—“one of the central documents in the history of Western civilization… the symbol of political liberty… [and] the foundation of modern constitutional government” (Viorst, Great Documents of Western Civilization, 112)—most handsomely bound, a copy given by leading Philadelphia lawyer and collector Simon Gratz. The Magna Carta—the Great Charter of English liberties granted by King John in 1215, one of the most influential documents ever published—holds “a unique place in popular imagination; quite early in its history it became a symbol and a battle cry against oppression, each successive generation reading into it a protection of their own threatened liberties… In the United States both the national and the state consititutions show ideas and even phrases directly traceable to Magna Carta” (New Britannica VI:485). It has “rightly [become] a sacred text, the nearest approach to an irrepealable ‘fundamental statute’ that England has ever had” (Pollock & Maitland I:173). Richard Pynson, royal printer to Henry VII and VIII, began publishing the earliest English statutes as early as 1508. This edition is Pynson’s rival Robert Redman’s third; he previously brought out a 1525 12mo and a 1534 octavo. The 1529 date on the title page appears to be a mistake for 1539, as given in the colophon, consistent with the 1540 start date of the almanac on the title page’s verso. All 16th-century printings of the Magna Carta are extraordinarily rare and desirable. They are often found defective; this copy is complete. Text is in Latin and Law French, printed in Gothic type. STC 9273. Marginal inkstamp to recto of page [1]: “Gift of Simon Gratz, Esq. November 1925.” Gratz (1838-1925) was an eminent Philadelphia attorney perhaps best known for his more than five decades of service on the city’s Board of Education. Occasional old ink marginalia. Text generally clean. Occasional small marginal losses; closed tear to page [3] restored. A handsomely bound legal cornerstone in fine condition with distinguished provenance. 111 au t um n 2014 | hi s t o ry , p hil o s o p hy & reli g i o n charles montesquieu “One Of The Greatest Masterpieces Of Political Theory” 131. MONTESQUIEU, Charles Louis de Secondat, Baron de. The Spirit of Laws… With Corrections and Additions communicated by the Author. London, 1750. Two volumes. Octavo, period-style full speckled brown calf. $16,000. First edition in English of Montesquieu’s classic De L’Esprit Des Loix, an enormous influence on American and French revolutionary thought, translated by Thomas Nugent and published just two years after the first French edition, handsomely bound. “One of the most remarkable works of the 18th century… Montesquieu’s theories underlay the thinking which led up to the American and French revolutions, and the United States Constitution “Useless laws weaken in particular is a lasting tribute to the principles he advocated” (PMM 197). “The theories of Montesquieu had a most important and far reaching influence on the thinking of the framers of the the necessary laws.” United States Constitution” (Sowerby III:2325). With woodcut-engraved ornamental initials and tailpieces, woodcut-engraved vignettes to title pages. Kress 5057. CBEL II:800. Goldsmiths 8571. Text very fresh with only light scattered foxing, a few pages with minor expert paper repairs. A scarce exceptional copy in fine condition, handsomely bound. au t um n 2014 | h i s t o r y, p h i l o s o p h y & r e l i g i o n 112 “The First Modern Attempt To Analyse Human Knowledge” 132. LOCKE, John. An Essay concerning Humane Understanding. In Four Books. London, 1706. Folio, early 19th-century full dark brown tree calf gilt neatly rebacked with original spine laid down. $4000. 1706 edition, the last folio edition of Locke’s remarkable study of the nature of knowledge and the last with alterations by Locke. A handsome, wide-margined copy. “Locke was the first to take up the challenge of Bacon and to attempt to estimate critically the certainty and the adequacy of human knowledge when confronted with God and the universe” (PMM 164). Locke’s conclusion—that while man can never attain a perfect and universal understanding of the world, he can gain sufficient knowledge to secure his own well being—became a touchstone for the Age of Enlightenment. Yolton 65. See PMM 164. Bookplate of renowned American banker Frank A. Vanderlip, Sr., who rose to prominence around the turn of the last century as the Assistant Secretary of the Treasury during the McKinley administration and later helped lay the groundwork for the Federal Reserve Act. Also with the bookplate of Vanderlip’s son, Frank Vanderlip, Jr. Text clean and fine. A handsome copy of this folio edition of a cornerstone of modern philosophical thought. “The Jews Wish To Have A State, And They Shall Have One” 133. HERZL, Theodor. A Jewish State: An Attempt at a Modern Solution of the Jewish Question. New York, 1904. Octavo, modern black cloth with contemporary black morocco gilt panels laid down. $4200. Scarce first American edition of Herzl’s landmark manifesto for an independent Jewish state, “one of the most important books in the history of the Jewish People.” First published in Vienna in 1896 as Der Judenstaat and first published in English that same year (in London by David Nutt), this work inaugurated Herzl’s work in “transform[ing] Zionism from a weak and insignificant movement into a world organization and a political entity that Great Britain was prepared to accept as the authorized representative of the Jewish people. This in turn led to the Balfour Declaration and eventually to the founding of the State of Israel” (Encyclopedia Judaica 8:419-20). “Herzl’s book… crystallized the idea of a national home for the Jews… By his work he transformed the Jewish people from a passive community into a positive political force” (PMM 381). With iconic photographic portrait of Herzl on the balcony of the Hotel Les Trois Rois, Basel, by E.M. Lilien. With original front free endpaper mounted and original rear free endpaper bound in. Gift inscription dated March 31, 1917 in “Jerusalem, Palestine.” Text generally clean. Small chips to half-title, original rear free endpaper expertly re-attached. Moderate age-wear to contemporary morocco panels; gilt bright. Very good condition. Scarce and significant. 134. SMITH, Adam. The Theory of Moral Sentiments. London, 1792. Two volumes. Octavo, contemporary full brown tree calf gilt. $4800. 113 au t um n 2014 “Smith Himself Ranked It Above The Wealth Of Nations”: First Posthumous Edition Of Smith’s Landmark Theory Of Moral Sentiments, 1792, The First To Include The “Thoroughly Revised, Greatly Expanded Text” Of The 1790 Edition | First issued in 1759, Moral Sentiments laid the foundation for Wealth of Nations. With Moral Sentiments and Wealth of Nations, Smith proposed “not merely a treatise on moral philosophy and a treatise on economics, but a complete moral and political philosophy” (Palgrave III:412). This scarce first posthumous edition is the first to include the “extensive revisions” of the initial two-volume edition of 1790, which appeared shortly before Smith’s death that year: offering the “combination of a thoroughly revised, greatly expanded text and a new publishing format… the changes and additions made are very significant” (Tribe 36; Sher in Tribe, 17). Stated Seventh Edition. Precedes the first American edition by over two decades. Volume I with early inked notation; one spine label without volume number. Small early shelf labels to spine ends. Text very fresh, spine labels expertly restored. A handsome near-fine copy, in contemporary calf. “His Most Important Early Philosophical Work… The First Bomb Hurled Against The Ancien Régime”: Scarce First Edition Of Voltaire’s Letters Concerning The English Nation, 1733 135. VOLTAIRE, pseudonym of Arouet, François-Marie. Letters Concerning the English Nation. London, 1733. Octavo, period-style full paneled brown calf. $4000. First edition of Voltaire’s commentary on English institutions, published one year before the French first edition, the first published work to relate the tale of Newton’s falling apple, handsomely bound. “Much struck by the admirable English phlegm and toleration of free thought and eccentricity, [Voltaire] wrote the Letters, the most sympathetic of critiques” (PMM 204). “Four letters deal directly with Newton and his theories and include, for the first time, the famous anecdote of the falling apple, which gave birth to the law of gravitation” (Babson 242). Of specific American interest is Letter IV, concerning William Penn and the founding of Pennsylvania as a haven for Quakers. When published in French in 1734, the work first appeared as Lettres écrits de Londres sur les Anglois; later in the same year it was retitled Lettres philosophiques, the title by which it is generally known. Mahaffey, 129. Sabin 100751. Bookplate of renowned bibliophile A. Edward Newton, a close friend and associate of A. S. W. Rosenbach, along with a laid-in autograph card signed to Newton from Seymour de Ricci, a foremost authority on rare books, discussing editions. With a French postmark and cancelled stamps, addressed in manuscript hand to Newton. A fine copy of one of Voltaire’s seminal works, with an exceptional provenance. hi s t o ry , p hil o s o p hy & reli g i o n First posthumous edition of Smith’s first book, this greatly expanded edition issued only two years after his death, the first to contain the “very significant… extensive revisions” of the twovolume 1790 edition, a work increasingly regarded as “one of the truly outstanding books in the intellectual history of the world” (Amartya Sen), handsomely bound in full paneled calf. au t um n 2014 | h i s t o r y, p h i l o s o p h y & r e l i g i o n 114 “A Powerful Influence On The Framers Of The Constitution” 136. HOBBES, Thomas. Leviathan, or, The Matter, Form, & Power of a Common-wealth Ecclesiastical and Civil. London, 1651 [i.e., 1680]. Folio, 18th-century full brown paneled calf rebacked. $6000. Third edition of one of the most controversial and important tracts ever written in political philosophy and a major influence on the framers of the Constitution, with copper-engraved allegorical frontispiece. “This book produced a fermentation in English thought not surpassed until the advent of Darwinism” (Pforzheimer). “Few books have caused more or fiercer controversy… The most profound materialistic system of modern times” (Rosenbach 36:345). Hobbes concluded that an individual should, unless his life is threatened, submit to the State. [He was] “the most original political philosopher of his time” (PMM 138). “Hobbes had a fundamentally pessimistic view of human nature… [which] had a powerful influence on the framers of the Constitution… When John Adams wrote that ‘he who would found a state, and make proper laws for the government of it, must presume that all men are bad by nature,’ he was expressing an idea that was derived at once from Hobbes” (Lutz & Warden, 38). Third edition. “From the type, paper, and general appearance this edition would seem to be the one which Anthony à Wood said was ‘reprinted [in London] again with its old date [in] 1680’… the present is a paginary reprint of the first edition” (Pforzheimer). Wing 2248. Pforzheimer 492. Macdonald & Hargreaves 42. Early owner ink signature to letterpress title page. Occasional faint foxing; a few pages mildly embrowned. An attractive copy. “The Unfolding Of A Mind Of Genius In Dialogue With Itself” 137. MONTAIGNE. The Essayes or, Morall, Politike, and Militarie Discourses. London, 1632. Folio (8 by 11-1/2 inches), contemporary full speckled brown calf rebacked. $5000. Third edition in English of Montaigne’s seminal masterpiece, with the important Elizabethan translation of John Florio used by Shakespeare as a source for The Tempest (circa 1611), scarce in contemporary calf boards. “Montaigne devised the essay form in which to express his personal convictions and private meditations, a form in which he can hardly be said to have been anticipated… He finds a place in the present canon, however, chiefly for his consummate representation of the enlightened skepticism of the 16th century, to which Bacon, Descartes and Newton were to provide the answers in the next” (PMM 95). Here is “the unfolding of a mind of genius in dialogue with itself and with the world” (Hollier, 250). “It is generally accepted that Shakespeare used Florio’s translation when writing the passage on the natural commonwealth in his Tempest” (Pforzheimer 378). Initially published in French in 1580, Montaigne’s Essayes were first published in English in 1603, with this translation. STC 18043. ESTC S114977. Lowndes, 1588. Library bookplate. Penciled owner signature. Interior fresh with only light scattered foxing, small expertly repaired closed tear to gutter edge of engraved title page, mild edge-wear to contemporary calf boards. An extremely good copy. “If Everything Else In Our Language Should Perish, It Would Alone Suffice…”: 1661 Cambridge King James Bible au t um n 2014 138. (BIBLE). The Holy Bible, Containing the Old Testament and the New… Cambridge, 1661. Small, thick octavo, mid-18th century full brown gilt-paneled morocco gilt rebacked with original spine laid down, custom clamshell box. $6000. 115 | The King James Version of the Bible, first published in 1611, has exercised an incalculable impact on piety, language and literature throughout the English-speaking world. Macaulay praised it as “a book, which if everything else in our language should perish, would alone suffice to show the whole extent of its beauty and power” (PMM 114). With elaborately engraved title page, decorative woodcut initials, tailpiece (leaf [3L3r]). Ruled in red throughout. Separate New Testament and metrical psalter title pages. Without Apocrypha (not called for). Darlow & Moule 534. Herbert 674. Armorial bookplates. Large ink initial “F” to front free endpaper. Old family record to verso of front free endpaper, following leaf and verso of title page. Interior quite fresh and clean, with a few minor tears. An excellent Bible in very nearly fine condition, distinguished in handsome morocco-gilt. First Edition In English Of Calmet’s “Most Valuable,” Monumental Dictionary Of The Holy Bible, 1732, Illustrated With 160 Engravings 139. CALMET, Dom Augustin. An Historical, Critical, Geographical, Chronological, and Etymological Dictionary of the Holy Bible. London, 1732. Three volumes. Folio (10 by 16 inches), period-style full speckled calf gilt. $8500. Scarce first edition in English of Augustin Calmet’s impressive biblical dictionary, illustrated with 160 copperplate engravings (over 50 double-page) depicting scriptural places, people and traditions, the Duke of Bedford’s copy, very handsomely bound. A French Benedictine abbot, historian and pioneering biblical exegete, Antoine Augustin Calmet authored several key theological texts as well as this comprehensive dictionary of “all the Proper Names mentioned in the Old or New Testament, whether of Men, Women, Cities, Countries, Rivers, Mountains &c.” In large part it collects explanatory essays from Calmet’s “epoch-making” 1707 commentary on the Latin Vulgate (Jewish Encyclopedia). “Most valuable… In Volume III is a very extensive Bibliotheca Sacra [a catalogue of editions of the Bible] which… displays great erudition and research” (Lowndes, 350).First published in French in two folio volumes in 1720; “a supplement (also folio) was added in 1728. An improved and enlarged edition in four folio volumes was published in 1730” (Catholic Encyclopedia). Armorial bookplates of the seventh and ninth Dukes of Bedford; the volumes hail from the library at Woburn Abbey. Scattered light foxing, occasional light marginal dampstaining. Minor loss to lower corners of a few leaves. Archival tissue repair to fore-edge of frontispiece, Volume I. Expert paper repairs to the dedication leaf and a few splits to folds on folding plates. An impressive production in excellent condition, most handsomely bound. Scarce. hi s t o ry , p hil o s o p hy & reli g i o n Handsomely bound 1661 Cambridge edition of the venerable King James Bible, “the most celebrated book in the English-speaking world” (Campbell, 1). au t um n 2014 | h i s t o r y, p h i l o s o p h y & r e l i g i o n 116 Grose’s 1812 Treatise On English Military Antiquities And Armor, Illustrated With Over 100 Engraved Plates 140. GROSE, Francis. Military Antiquities Respecting a History of the English Army from the Conquest to the Present Time. WITH: A Treatise on Ancient Armour and Weapons. London, 1812. Two volumes. Large thick quarto, early 20th-century full crimson morocco gilt, tan calf doublures; leather-edged slipcases. $3500. Third edition of Grose’s Military Antiquities, with his Treatise on Armour and Weapons. Illustrated with over 100 engraved plates depicting soldiers, arms and armor, siege equipment and fortifications, with vignette title pages and frontispieces. Beautifully bound by Sangorski & Sutcliffe. Grose (1730-1791), who has been called a sort of “antiquarian Falstaff,” turned to writing after squandering his inheritance. Tapping his early interest in heraldry and antiquities and his skills as a draughtsman, he began in 1773 to publish his most popular work Antiquities of England and Wales, an extensive work which not complete until 1787. “ Military Antiquities was originally published in London, 1786-88. Lowndes, 948-49. Grose’s name misspelled on spines of bindings. Fine condition, a beautifully bound copy. “The Qualities You Have Shewn In The Progress Of This Business Have Made Me Earnestly Wish To Improve The Acquaintance That We Have Thus Happily, Though Accidentally Begun…” 141. BLACKSTONE, William. Autograph letter signed. Lincolns Inn Fields, February 22, 1778. One page, quarto, matted and framed with portrait. Entire piece measures 23-1/4 by 19 inches. $7500. Fine autograph letter signed by the great English jurist, judge and politician William Blackstone, attractively framed with an engraved portrait. The letter reads: “I have received the copies of the draught, for which I thank you. Notwithstanding all our diligence, I observe, from looking over Sir S. J. Janssen’s lists in Mr. Howard’s book, that we have omitted to get in any account of the transports, from the sessions of the division of the lower hamlets which (like Westminster) has a separate commission from the rest of the County of Middlesex. The omission is of no great consequence, any further than as it impeaches the accuracy of the table, and may make a small alteration in the average for the County of Middlesex. If Mr. Hatsel will write a line to the Sheriff of Middlesex, the deficiency may be supplied in the course of two days. In your list, have you the name of Mr. Elwes, Member for Berks, a man of excellent understanding and a very good Justice of Peace? Believe me sincere when I assure you, that the qualities you have shewn in the progress of this business have made me earnestly wish to improve the acquaintance that we have thus happily, though accidentally begun.” Fine condition. 117 au t um n 2014 | hi s t o ry , p hil o s o p hy & reli g i o n raphael holinshed / shakespeare An Elizabethan Cornerstone And A Major Source For Shakespeare: Holinshed’s Chronicles, 1587, Second And Best Edition 142. HOLINSHED, Raphael. The First and Second Volumes of Chronicles, Comprising: 1. The Description and historie of England. 2. The Description and historie of Ireland.. 3. The Description and historie of Scotland. Now Newlie Augmented and Continued… to the yeare 1586. London, 1587. Three volumes bound in two, as often. Thick folio, 19th-century three-quarter dark burgundy calf. $27,000. Greatly revised and expanded 1587 second edition of the greatest Elizabethan repository of English history, an important source (this edition) for Shakespeare’s plays, with woodcut initials and title pages. Five of the six textual cancellations have been made in this copy (as in most copies). Attractively bound. As the foremost British history available at the time, the Chronicles did more to shape Elizabethan literature than any English historical work. “The Elizabethan dramatists drew many of their plots from Holinshed’s pages,” and this second edition is demonstrably the edition employed by Shakespeare as the principal source of his “history” plays. “Nearly all of the historical plays, as well as Macbeth, King Lear, and part of Cymbeline, are based on Holinshed” (DNB). In fact, Shakespeare drew not only his plots from Holinshed, but occasionally his phrases. The complete story of the rise and fall of Macbeth can be found in the Scottish history (Part III, pp. 170-76). In this copy five of the six offending sections are cancelled, as usual—“the Privy Council’s action apparently took place before substantial sales occurred” (Clegg, “Which Holinshed?” in Huntington Library Quarterly, Volume 55). Text in black-letter. STC 13569. Bookplates. Occasional early ink annotations, extensive marginalia to the table in Volume III. Light marginal dampstaining to approximately first 20 leaves of the first volume, and last 20 leaves of the second volume. Repairs to joints, restoration to bumped corners, some wear to boards. A near-fine copy. Scarce and desirable. au t um n 2014 | h i s t o r y, p h i l o s o p h y & r e l i g i o n 118 historie of cambria “The First And Rarest Of All Editions”: Illustrated Historie Of Cambria, Now Called Wales, 1584, The First Work To Claim The Welsh Discovered America, With Early References To King Arthur 143. (CARADOC OF LLANCARFAN). The Historie of Cambria, now called Wales: A part of the most famous Yland of Brytaine, written in the Brytish language aboue two hundreth yeares past... London, 1584. Small octavo, late 19th-century full brown morocco gilt. $14,000. First edition of this rare and important history of Wales and Welsh royalty, illustrated throughout with woodcut portraits. This work was the first to attribute the original discovery of America to the Welsh in the 12th century and contains two very early references to King Arthur, including a description of the discovery of the bones of King Arthur and his queen: “the bones were of marvelous bignes, and in the scull were ten wounds, of which one was great, and seemed to be his deaths wound: the Queenes haire was to the light faire and yellowe, but as soone as it was touched it fell to ashes” (page 238). Handsomely bound. “The first and rarest of all the editions” (Sabin 40914) of this famous history of Wales and Welsh royalty from the 7th to 13th centuries and the “Princes of Wales of the blood royall of England” from Edward I to Elizabeth. The work was translated into English in the 16th century by Humphrey Llwyd but remained in manuscript. David Powell, a Welsh historian, “was requested by Sir Henry Sidney, lord president of Wales, to prepare for the press an English translation… though Llwyd’s translation was the basis, Powell’s corrections and additions, founded as they were on independent research, made the ‘Historie’ practically a new work… and later historians of Wales have to a large extent drawn their material from it” (DNB). Printed in Roman and black letter. Illustrated with woodcut portraits, title page, large decorative woodcut initials, head- and tailpieces. STC 4606. Small inkstamp, shelf label; occasional old ink marginalia. Slight rubbing to joints. A very nearly fine copy, handsomely bound. 119 au t um n 2014 | hi s t o ry , p hil o s o p hy & reli g i o n 1590 julius caesar “The Most Widely Studied Military Handbook In Literature”: 1590 Edition In English Of Caesar’s Commentaries 144. CAESAR, Gaius Julius. The Eight Bookes of Caius Iulius Caesar Conteyning his Martiall Exployts in the Realme of Gallia and the Countries Brdering upon the Same… Translated out of Latin into English by Arthur Golding. London, 1590. Small octavo, modern full dark brown calf. $15,000. Second edition of Golding’s landmark English translation of Caesar’s Commentaries, the first complete translation of Caesar into English and the first to include the “Exposition of the old Names of the Countries, Cities, Townes, etc.,” attractively bound. Caesar’s only extant work apart from his history of the Roman Civil Wars and a few letters, “If you must break the law, his Commentaries is “the most widely studied military handbook in literature and a model of clear, straightforward composition” (Hornstein, 81). The eighth book of the Commentaries do it to seize power: was written by Aulus Hirtius, one of Caesar’s generals and one of the consuls appointed immediately after Caesar’s assassination. “It is quite certain that Shakespeare was well in all other cases observe it.” acquainted with his work” (DNB). Golding was only the second translator to render Caesar’s Commentaries into English, the first being John Tiptoft, whose version appeared in 1530; the 1565 first edition of Golding’s translation is considered “the first English translation of De Bello Gallico, with the eighth book by Aulus Hircius” (Pforzheimer 410). Text printed in Gothic type. Lowndes, 345. A few spots of foxing, minor marginal stain to leaf E1. Attractive binding fine. A handsome copy of this early translation of a classic text. au t um n 2014 | h i s t o r y, p h i l o s o p h y & r e l i g i o n 120 marie antoinet te / napoleon “De La Biblioteque [Sic] De Mon Frere L’Empereur Napoleon”: The Mémoires Of Cardinal De Retz And Joli, 1777-1779, Five Volumes From The Library Of Marie-Antoinette, And A Rare Association Volume From The Library Of Napoleon Bonaparte, Inscribed By His Brother Joseph To Napoleon’s Longtime Trusted Friend And Secretary, Baron Méneval 145. (MARIE ANTOINETTE) (NAPOLEON BONAPARTE) GONDI, Jean François Paul de, Cardinal de Retz. Mémoires du Cardinal de Retz. [Volumes I, III-VI]. Geneve, 1777. WITH: [Volume II] Geneve, 1779. WITH: JOLI, Guy. Mémoires de Guy Joli… et Mémoires de Madame la Duchesse de Nemours. Geneve, 1777. Six volumes altogether. Small octavo (4 by 6-3/4 inches), contemporary full brown polished calf gilt, armorial coat of arms (I, III-VI), contemporary full mottled calf gilt (II), custom wrappers, custom clamshell box. $38,000. | hi s t o ry , p hil o s o p hy & reli g i o n Cardinal de Retz played a central role in the deadly politics of the Frondist era in France (1648-52), when a rebellion arose against Anne of Austria (regent for her son, Louis XIV) and her minister Cardinal Mazarin. “His Mémoires, composed circa 1675-79…, cover his youth, his political career during the Fronde, his conflict with the crown, and the beginning of his exile after he lost his battle to Mazarin. They stop abruptly in 1656, during a papal conclave in Rome. Part of an important tradition of aristocratic political and personal memoirs in 17th-century France, they… provide an advance psychological analysis of the secret motivations of his public acts” (Stefanovska in Lyons & Wise, Chance, 184, 183n). This classic political history and autobiography clearly reveals “the influence not only of Machiavelli and of Montaigne but of Hobbes, Naudé and Pascal (Lyons & Wise, 13, 191). Mémoires du Cardinal de Retz first appeared in a three-volume edition in 1717, published in Nancy, Joli Mémoires first published in 1718. With woodcut-engraved vignettes to title pages (I-IV); woodcut engraved head- and tailpieces. Text in French. Graesse VI:94. Marie-Antoinette formed two libraries, one at at the Tuileries and one at the Petit Trianon. Volumes in her library at Petit Trianon (Volumes I, III-VI of this copy) are identified by a gilt-stamped cipher with the initials ‘C[hateau] T[rianon]’ surmounted by a crown (Olivier 2508, fer 15) at the spine end, sometimes also on the upper board (Fletcher, 74). Volumes I, III-VI with inkstamps to title pages stating from “Bibliotheque du premiere consul.” Volume II with unidentified armorial bookplate, occasional lightly penciled marginalia, and small ink mark to margin (p. 387). Trace of bookplate removal (I). Interiors quite fresh with only light scattered foxing, tiny bit of loss to corner not affecting text (II:83), a few minor marginal paper flaws, faint occasional marginal dampstaining in one volume (IV) only, light edge-wear. An exceptional association set in extremely good condition with a most rare provenance. 121 au t um n 2014 Rare 1777-79 editions of the four-volume Mémoires of Cardinal de Retz and the 1771 two-volume Mémoires de Guy Joli and Madame la Duchesse de Nemours, possessing an exceedingly rare provenance in association with two of the most legendary figures in French history— Marie-Antoinette and Napoleon Bonaparte. Five volumes (I, III-VI) are from the library of Marie-Antoinette, bound in contemporary calf gilt and displaying her distinctive gilt-tooled armorial coat of arms on the boards, along with her gilt-stamped crowned cipher “CT” on the spines. Volume II, bound in contemporary mottled calf gilt, contains a lengthy gift inscription by Joseph Bonaparte, brother of Napoleon Bonaparte—“de la biblioteque [sic] de mon frere l’ Empereur Napoleon” (from the library of my brother the Emperor Napoleon)— to Baron Claude Francois Méneval, Napoleon’s trusted private secretary and his “only really close friend and confidant.” au t um n 2014 | h i s t o r y, p h i l o s o p h y & r e l i g i o n 122 “Yo La Reyna”: Signed By Queen Isabella Of Spain, Document Addressing Financial Concerns Of Her Loyal Courtier And Companion, Beatriz Galindo, “La Latina” 146. (ISABELLA, Queen of Spain). Manuscript document signed. Sevilla, February 20, 1502. Single quarto sheet, manuscript in secretarial hand on recto, signed by Queen Isabella, measures 9 by 12-1/2 inches; matted and framed with portrait, entire piece measures 26 by 21 inches. $7500. Lovely official manuscript document from 1502 signed by Queen Isabella of Spain “Yo la Reyna,” addressing the financial concerns of one of her favorite courtiers, her Latin teacher and loyal companion Beatriz Galindo. Written in a clear Spanish court hand, headed at the top “La Reyna,” endorsed “Por mandado de la Reyna” (by the order of the Queen) and countersigned by Pedro de Almazán, royal secretary. This document absolves Beatriz Galindo of any money owed the Queen by Galindo’s late husband—and the Queen’s late secretary—Francisco de Madrid, who had died fighting against the Moors a few months prior. Beatriz Galindo was perhaps the brightest star of a constellation of female scholars and counselors that flourished in Isabella’s court, known as the “docta puellae.” Galindo was referred to by contemporary chroniclers as “La Latina”; she taught the Queen Latin—beginning when the Queen was 30, and Galindo only 16!—and also taught the Queen’s daughters Isabel, Juana, María and Catalina (i.e., Catherine of Aragón, who would go on to become Queen of England). It was Isabella who arranged Galindo’s 1495 marriage with her royal secretary, Francisco Ramírez de Madrid, a captain in the army and a widower. Galindo was at the queen’s side when she died, and accompanied her body from Medina del Campo to Granada, where she was interred. Faint fold lines, mild edge-wear to right margin of document. A lovely signed framed piece. A Guide To 18th-Century Foot Care, Marie Antoinette’s Copy, Beautifully Bound With Her Gilt Arms 147. (MARIE ANTOINETTE) LAFOREST, Nicholas-Laurent. L’Art de Soigner les Pieds. Paris, 1782. Small octavo, contemporary full brown morocco, elaborately gilt-stamped spine and covers bearing the armorial crest of Marie Antoinette. $16,500. Second edition (first published in 1781) of this classic podiatric work, written by the chiropodist of Louis XVI and the royal family, with the gilt arms of Marie Antoinette, beautifully bound. In the list of 24 books of “Natural history, medical and physical sciences of Marie Antoinette,” drawn up by Quentin-Bauchart (1886, II, p. 239, No. 49 of Les Femmes Bibliophiles de France), this volume was one of the five still in private hands and came from the collection of Baron Pichon. This work by NicholasLaurent Laforest is one of the early classics on podiatry, this second edition containing an additional chapter on the care of the feet of soldiers, and also with two folding engraved plates depicting podiatric instruments and various deformities of the feet. Text entirely in French. Armorial bookplate of the Marquis de Fortia [d’Urban], owner of the Château Fortia and its vinicultural interests. Armorial bookplate and armorial paper bookmark of Alain de Rothschild, a 20th-century member of the prominent pan-European Rothschild banking family. An about-fine copy, in beautiful armorial binding of Marie Antoinette. “Every Englishman Ought To Possess This Interesting And Important Biography”: First Edition Of Clarke And M’Arthur’s Impressive, Illustrated Life Of Nelson, 1809 123 au t um n 2014 148. (NELSON, Lord Horatio) CLARKE, James Stanier and M’ARTHUR, John. The Life of Admiral Lord Nelson, K.B. from His Lordship’s Manuscripts. London, 1809. Two volumes. Thick folio, contemporary full tan polished calf gilt rebacked with original spines laid down. $4800. | hi s t o ry , p hil o s o p hy & reli g i o n First edition of “the fullest, and in many respects the best” biography of Britain’s greatest naval hero, “forming a complete naval history of the last half-century,” illustrated with engraved frontispiece in Volume I envisioning Nelson’s apotheosis, 16 finely engraved fullpage plates (including five maps and plans, the Battle of Trafalgar among them) and four engraved vignettes. Clarke and M’Arthur’s work—“great not only in size, but in conception”—enjoys a reputation as “the fullest, and in many respects the best biography” of Britain’s greatest naval hero, based as it is “on original documents and letters entrusted to the authors” (DNB). Copies found with varying number of plates. Lowndes, 472. Foxing to plates, text clean. Corners restored. An attractive, very good copy. “A Good And Gallant Work”: Paulo Paruta’s History Of Venice, 1658 First Edition In English—Baron Lechmere’s Copy 149. PARUTA, Paulo. (CAREY, Henry, Second Earl of Monmouth, translator). The History of Venice… likewise, the Wars of Cyprus… Wherein the Famous Sieges of Nicosia, and Famagosta, and Battel Lepanto are Contained. London, 1658. Two parts in one volume. Small folio, modern half tan calf. $5500. First edition in English of this 17th-`century history of Venice, translated by Henry Carey, second Earl of Monmouth. Baron Lechmere’s copy, with his armorial bookplate. Attractively bound. The second part contains the history of the Turkish conquest of Cyprus in 1570-71. First published in Venice in 1605. Wing P636. Blackmer 1260. Atabey 929. Engraved armorial bookplate of Nicholas Lechmere, the Baron Lechmere (1675-1727), dated 1703. Later bookplate. Fine condition. An attractive volume, with distinguished provenance. au t um n 2014 | h i s t o r y, p h i l o s o p h y & r e l i g i o n 124 150. “Vinegar Bible,” 1717. “ vinegar bible ,” 1717 150. BIBLE. The Holy Bible Containing the Old Testament and the New. Oxford, 1717, 1716. Two volumes. Elephant folio (13-1/2 by 20-1/2 inches), contemporary full crimson morocco gilt rebacked with original spines laid down. $18,500. Pictured opposite. “Perhaps The Most Important Landmark In Doré’s Career”: His Great Folio Bible, With 238 Full-Page Wood-Engravings, Large Format Copy In Full Contemporary Morocco-Gilt 151. (DORÉ, Gustave). The Holy Bible. London and New York, circa 1867. Two volumes. Thick folio (12 by 15 inches), contemporary full brown morocco gilt. $6500. One of the earliest editions in English (all undated) of Gustave Doré’s great folio Bible, splendidly illustrated by him with 238 full-page wood-engravings and beautifully bound in contemporary full morocco-gilt. “In the 1870s, The Doré Bible was perhaps the most treasured (and expensive) book in the world” (Malan, 81). Certainly, it proved a milestone in the artist’s career. “The Bible was enthusiastically sponsored by one of the greatest French publishers of illustrated books of the day… Looking through these illustrations today it is impossible to recapture the positive furor of enthusiasm with which they were received on their first appearance” (Muir, 224). Because of the demand, a number of editions in English saw print between 1867 and 1903 in a variety of formats: this set is among the earliest editions, containing 238 plates (later editions had only 205) and in the large format of 12 by 15 inches. Scattered light foxing; contemporary morocco in wonderful condition. A beautiful copy. hi s t o ry , p hil o s o p hy & reli g i o n In 1709 John Baskett purchased the exclusive royal patent to print Bibles in England, control of which his family retained until 1799. This magnificent edition of the Bible is Baskett’s most important work, highly regarded for its large, elegant type; its 60 striking copper-engraved vignette head- and tailpieces depicting some of the most dramatic moments of Scripture; and its many delicately engraved historiated initials. This edition takes its nickname from a misprint found in the headline above Luke 20 (leaf [G6v]) that mentions the parable of the “vinegar” instead of the “vineyard.” Scholars and collectors alike today esteem the “Vinegar Bible” as one of the most beautiful and legible editions of Scripture ever published. “Two distinct varieties occur” (Darlow & Moule). This copy is variety A (no priority established), with additional engraved general title page depicting Moses writing the first words of Genesis (here bound as frontispiece); view of Oxford on other general title page; and vignette title page for New Testament depicting the Annunciation, dated 1716. However, this copy also includes the engraved general title page, engraved by Sturt, depicting a church interior with figures of Aaron and Moses, which is generally found in Variant B, here bound in as the title page of Volume II. Includes Apocrypha. Evidence of bookplates; ownership inscriptions dated 1866 to 1875 of the Gabbett Dickin family. Top edge of title page trimmed, interior generally clean with some browning and spotting, occasional small stains, small marginal repair to 2M5 in Volume I. Contemporary morocco-gilt bindings with expert restoration to extremities. A beautiful copy of this distinguished edition. | First edition of the monumental, splendidly illustrated “Vinegar Bible,” a “magnificent edition” (Darlow & Moule) with wonderfully engraved frontispiece and vignette title pages, 60 detailed copper engravings, beautifully bound in contemporary gilt-decorated morocco with gilt armorial centerpieces. au t um n 2014 Baskett’s Magnificently Illustrated 1717 Elephant Folio “Vinegar Bible,” Beautifully Bound 125 au t um n 2014 | h i s t o r y, p h i l o s o p h y & r e l i g i o n 126 winston churchill “That No Man Who Had Been A Nazi Can In 1946 Be A Foreman In A Mine When In 1945 No Man Could Be A Foreman Unless He Was A Nazi”: Churchill’s Own Signed Retained Manifesto On Postwar German Reconstruction 152. CHURCHILL, Winston. Holograph manuscript signed. London, July/August, 1946. Ten pages, measuring 7-1/2 by 9-1/2 inches, stationery embossed with House of Commons stamp on upper left of each sheet. $19,500. Churchill’s own signed retained manifesto on Postwar German reconstruction, an original manuscript draft of a Labour Party report by William Wells, who had sided with Churchill as Leader of the Opposition, which also discusses denazification and the Potsdam agreement. Undoubtedly Churchill used what Wells wrote in this tenpage, 1200-word report in formulating his own Conservative Party’s “A man larger than life, composed of policy on raising German morale and lowering the British cost of administering their zone in postwar Germany. bigger and simpler elements than ordinary This ten-page manuscript is in the hand of William Wells (1908-1990) men, a gigantic historical figure during his who represented Walsall (1945-1955) and Walsall North (1955-1974) as a member of the Labour Party in the House of Commons. He was elected own lifetime, superhumanly bold… an in the July 5, 1945 Labour landslide which resulted in Clement Attlee replacing Conservative Winston S. Churchill as Prime Minister. There was orator or prodigious powers, the savior of a Sub-Committee of the Select Committee set up by the House of Commons to make a report on expenditures in the British Zone in his country, a mythical hero… the largest Germany. The Committee submitted its report in July 1946, concluding that the cost of supporting the British Zone in the year 1946-47 would human being of our time.” —Isaiah Berlin be over £80 million, an amount Britain could not afford. In the report here offered, there are corrections, additions, and deletions by Wells, a member of the Select Committee, who ostensibly presented his final report to the Committee. What appears to be the final draft of Wells’ report was undoubtedly used by Churchill, Leader of the Opposition, as it more resembled his own party lines than the Labour Party’s. Light fingerprint smudge at signature. Fine condition. “When I Look At A Map Of The World And I Notice The Minuscule Dot That Is The State Of Israel, I Cannot Help Tormenting Myself With The Question Of How This Tiny State Will Survive.” david ben - gurion Rare Archive Of Ten Letters Signed By David Ben-Gurion From 1953-56, Including Five Signed By Him As Prime Minister 153. BEN-GURION, David. Archive of ten letters signed. Israel, October 11, 1953-May 3, 1956. Ten letters. Ten sheets of ivory paper (each 6-1/4 by 8-1/2 inches), each with two-hole punch in right margin. $20,000. A rare collection of ten letters signed by Ben-Gurion, four entirely penned and signed by him (two written as Israel’s first Prime Minister) and six typed letters signed by him on official letterhead of the State of Israel (three as Minister of Defense and three in his second term as Prime Minister), all in Hebrew, including letters to prominent members of the Knesset and the Ministry of Education, as well as political opponents and prominent journalists, expressing his deep concerns over Israel’s future in the world, strife over its borders and settlements, immigration and a looming threat of war in 1955 with news of ships headed for Egypt. This fascinating archive of ten letters signed by Ben-Gurion spans three crucial years and features five letters signed by him as Prime Minister. The chief architect of the State of Israel, Ben-Gurion became its first Prime Minister in February 1949, serving until December 1953, when he moved to the kibbutz of Sede-Boker. Appointed Minister of Defense in February 1955, he returned as Prime Minister at the end of that year, remaining in the post until his resignation in 1963. In this archive are two autograph letters entirely penned by him and signed as Israel’s first Prime Minister, and three typed letters signed by him in his second term, along with two autograph letters entirely penned and signed by him while at Sede-Boker, and three typed letters signed by him while serving as Minister of Defense under Prime Minister Moshe Sharett. Ben-Gurions’s October 11 letter as first Prime Minister, in particular, movingly speaks to his concern Israel’s survival—“When I look at a map of the world and I notice the minuscule dot that is the State of Israel, I cannot help tormenting myself with the question of how this tiny state will survive.” That concern is amplified in his 1955 letter reporting ships headed to Egypt—“loaded with tanks, guns, aircraft and submarines.” Four autograph letters signed (two on letterhead, two on lined paper); six typed letters signed on letterhead. Only a few faint foldlines. A rare archive in fine condition, with Ben-Gurion’s cursive and signatures bold and clear. 128 h i s t o r y, p h i l o s o p h y & r e l i g i o n “In Devotion And Gratitude… Bill”: Presentation Copy Of Alcoholics Anonymous, The Famous “Big Book,” Inscribed By Bill Wilson 154. WILSON, Bill. Alcoholics Anonymous: The Story of How Many Thousands of Men and Women Have Recovered from Alcoholism. New York, 1948. Octavo, original navy cloth, dust jacket, custom chemise and half morocco clamshell box. $12,500. First edition, 12th printing, presentation copy, of A.A.’s “Big Book,” inscribed: “For M——, In devotion and gratitude. Ever, Bill. BH, 2/5/53.” au t um n 2014 | Bill Wilson first published the Alcoholics Anonymous “Big Book” in 1939, a particularly trying time in American history. The Great Depression had driven many Americans to desperation while the repeal of Prohibition in 1933 ensured that alcohol was readily available. The “Big Book” plumbs the depths of addiction and depression and includes case histories of many of the original members of A.A. Immensely popular, this first edition continued to be reprinted without change until 1955 when a second edition appeared. Only a little gilt remaining on mildly toned spine of book. Some light creasing and a few closed tears to edges of bright dust jacket. An extremely good copy, most desirable inscribed by Wilson. Signed By Sigmund Freud 155. FREUD, Sigmund. Autograph Document Signed. Vienna, December 13, 1926. One page, octavo, matted and framed with portrait. Entire piece measures 17 by 15 inches. $4500. Customs declaration, signed by Sigmund Freud, handsomely framed with a waist-length photograph of Freud smoking a cigar. The document, written in German, is addressed to the Customs Office at Vienna’s Northwest Train Station, and reads (in translation): “I hereby declare that the carpet sent to me from Berlin is a gift from my sister and has been in constant use for 17 years and absolutely cannot be considered an article for sale. Its value should be 1,000 shillings.” Fine condition. E conomics 129 au t um n 2014 | ec o n o m ic s fischer bl ack “Some People Stay Eternally Young And Just Keep On Learning”: First Edition Of Exploring General Equilibrium, Inscribed The Month Before His Death By Fischer Black, Co-Creator Of The Famed Black-Scholes Formula, To His Colleague, Economist Peter L. Bernstein 156. BLACK, Fischer. Exploring General Equilibium. Cambridge, Massachusetts, 1995. Octavo, original black cloth, dust jacket. $8500. First edition of the last book by Black—considered the “Einstein of Finance”—inscribed by him shortly after publication and the month before his early death to his colleague, the economist Peter L. Bernstein: “Peter—As you have shown over and over, some people stay eternally young, and just keep on learning—Fischer 7/4/95.” Black, often viewed as the “Einstein of Finance,” saw Exploring General Equilibrium as “his magnum opus… the end result of almost 30 years of sustained thinking about some of the deepest problems in economics” (Mehrling, Fischer Black). Published shortly before his death, this opens “up doors for further research… It is divided into three sections: the first outlines Black’s assessment of open questions and stylized facts… the second looks at different issues in general equilibrium theory… The third section… provides an extremely useful guide to general equilibrium macroeconomics” (Goenka, Economic Journal). The recipient is renowned economist and financial historian Peter L. Bernstein, whose work on efficient market theory “changed trading behavior on Wall Street” (New York Times). At Bernstein’s death in 2009, the Wall Street Journal paid tribute by noting: “Investing has yielded a few stars so famous they are known by first name. Warren Buffett is one. Peter L. Bernstein… was another.” Not long after Black’s death in 1995, Bernstein recalled Black’s “first article appearing in our maiden issue” of his influential Journal of Portfolio Management, and observed: “I am fortunate to have an autographed copy of Fischer’s last major publication, Exploring General Equilibrium... Like everything Fischer wrote, the book is full of gems” (Fischer Black: In Memoriam).A very scarce inscribed copy in fine condition. au t um n 2014 | economics 130 “The Most Famous Methodological Piece Within 20th Century Economics” 157. FRIEDMAN, Milton. Essays in Positive Economics. Chicago, 1953. Octavo, original blue cloth, dust jacket. $5800. First edition of the work containing the first appearance of Friedman’s pivotal essay, “Methodology of Positive Economics,” hailed as “the most cited, influential, and controversial piece of methodological writing in 20th-century economics,” in very scarce dust jacket. “The most famous methodological piece within 20th century economics is Milton Friedman’s ‘Methodology of Positive Economics.’ This piece is taken to advocate prediction-ism as the most important goal for and criterion of the success of economic theories” (Eric Schliesser, “The Stigler-Kuhn Correspondence and the Philosophial Prehistory of Prediction in Chicago Economics”). Small loss to initial blank likely from excised owner signature. Book fine; dust jacket with expert restoration. “The First To Set Forth The Theory That Labor-Time Is A Direct Measure Of Money In A Systematic Way” (Marx) 158. GRAY, John. Lectures on the Nature and Use of Money. Edinburgh / London, 1848. Octavo, original dark green cloth. $4200. First edition, exceedingly scarce presentation copy, of Gray’s final economics work, marking a radical shift from his early Ricardian socialism, featuring his “most open embrace of the doctrines of Adams Smith” (McNally), containing rarely found presentation leaf partially printed and completed in unidentified manuscript hand presenting this to “The Right Hon. The Earl of Jermyn’s” (a subsidiary title of the Marquess of Bristol) of Ickworth, Suffolk, together with the library shelf label of the family’s magnificent Ickworth estate. Gray, “a founding father of Ricardian socialism in the 1830s” (Rothbard, Austrian Perspective, 395) here signals a change from his “idea of central planning and his antipathy to competition,” arguing instead “that a full and efficient utilization of resources could be secured by a fundamental reform of the monetary system” (ODNB). Arguing against communitarianism, he endorses a system where “the great principle of individual competition would be left free and unfettered as the air we breathe’“ (emphasis in original, 125). Goldsmiths 35713. Kress C7414. Presentation leaf partially printed and completed in unidentified manuscript hand presenting this work to “The Right Hon. The Earl of Jermyn’s” (a subsidiary title of the Marquess of Bristol). A fine presentation copy. 131 au t um n 2014 | ec o n o m ic s benjamin graham “No One Has Ever Become Poor Reading Graham” (Warren Buffett): Exceptionally Rare First Edition Of Graham’s The Intelligent Investor, In Original Dust Jacket 159. GRAHAM, Benjamin. The Intelligent Investor. A Book of Practical Counsel. New York, 1949. Octavo, original blue cloth, dust jacket. $15,000. Extremely rare first edition, early issue of Graham’s classic work, in original first issue dust jacket. After the overwhelming success of his groundbreaking work, Security Analysis, in 1949 Benjamin Graham, “motivated by the need for consumer education and protection… produced a version of his investment text designed for the individual investor. Such a reader was likely to be put off by the size and depth of Security Analysis… The Intelligent Investor was a hit... Wall Street professionals found it indispensable. Because it was so widely read, the book brought greater visibility, respect and prestige to the field of security analysis” (Lowe, 129-30). “Security Analysis and The Intelligent Investor are still considered the ‘bibles’ for both individual investors and Wall Street professionals” (Buffer Stock Project). First-issuedust jacket, with $3.50 price and “Editor of Barron’s” on front flap. Book fine; expert restoration to rarely found first-issue dust jacket. “Serious physicists read Sir Isaac Newton… Serious investors read Benjamin Graham.” (Investopedia) au t um n 2014 | economics 132 Keynes’ A Treatise On Money, In Rare Original Dust Jackets 160. KEYNES, John Maynard. A Treatise on Money. London, 1930. Two volumes. Octavo, original blue cloth, dust jackets. $7500. First edition of Keynes’ important work on monetary theory, in rare original dust jackets. “The world-wide slump after 1929 prompted Keynes to attempt an explanation of, and new methods for controlling the vagaries of the tradecycle” (PMM 423). “In 1930, Keynes brought out his heavy, two-volume Treatise on Money, which effectively set out his Wicksellian theory of the credit cycle. In it, the rudiments of a liquidity preference theory of interest are laid out and Keynes believed it would be his magnum opus… [however, criticism was swift and extreme] and the Treatise led to the formation of a reading group, known as ‘the circus,’ composed of young Cambridge economists Richard Kahn and others” (History of Economic Thought). As a result of the controversy over the Treatise on Money, and the subsequent discussions and debates that arose from it, Keynes produced his greatest work, The General Theory, which literally began a revolution in American economics. AMEX 254. Books near-fine, with a single tear to head of each spine and slight toning to spines. Rare dust jackets with expert restoration. A desirable copy. “One Of The Founders Of Modern Economics” 161. MALTHUS, Thomas Robert. Principles of Political Economy Considered with a View to their Practical Application. London, 1820. Octavo, contemporary full speckled brown calf, elaborately gilt-decorated spine. $8200. First edition of this important classic of economic theory, in contemporary calf-gilt. “There can be no doubt that [Malthus’] importance for economists today rests mainly on his Principles of Political Economy. It was because of this latter work that Keynes reinstated Malthus as a major figure in modern economic thought” (New Palgrave). “One of the founders of modern economics,” Malthus was credited by Keynes with framing the theory “that a lack of effective demand can cause economic crises” (PMM 251). “In his Principles of Political Economy, Malthus was proposing investment in public works and private luxury as a means of increasing effective demand, and hence as a palliative to economic distress” (DSB). Goldsmith 22767. Kress C577. Faint scattered foxing to text, contemporary calf-gilt handsome. A handsome copy in near-fine condition. 133 au t um n 2014 | ec o n o m ic s jesse l . livermore “Profits Always Take Care Of Themselves, But Losses Never Do”: Limited First Edition Of How To Trade In Stocks, 1940, Most Rare Signed By Livermore 162. LIVERMORE, Jesse L. How to Trade in Stocks: The Livermore Formula for Combining Time Element and Price. New York, 1940. Octavo, original blue cloth, original slipcase, custom box. $25,000. Limited first edition, one of fewer than 500 copies specially printed on rag paper, of the only book by one of Wall Street’s most flamboyant stock traders, featuring the first in-depth explanation of the famed Livermore Formula, his highly successful trading method still in use today, and containing 16 full color charts, signed by Livermore. The only book written by Jesse L. Livermore, widely believed to be the subject of Edwin Lefèvre’s fictional biography and investment classic Reminiscences of a Stock Operator. One of the most flamboyant figures on Wall Street in the first half of the 20th century, Livermore made and lost several fortunes and was even blamed for the stock market crash of 1929. Intrigued by Livermore’s career, financial writer Edwin Lefèvre conducted weeks of interviews with him during the early 1920s. Then, in 1923, Lefèvre wrote a first-person account of a fictional trader named “Larry Livingston,” who bore countless similarities to Livermore, ranging from their last names to the specific events of their trading careers. Although many traders attempted to glean the secret of Livermore’s success from Reminiscences, his technique was not fully elucidated until this work was published in 1940. How to Trade in Stocks offers an in-depth explanation of the Livermore Formula, the trading method, still in use today, that turned Livermore into a Wall Street icon. Published the same year as a trade edition. Although the limitation statement suggests that 500 copies of the limited edition were produced, the late collector/dealer of Wall Street books Rod Klein asserted that the true number of limited editions was probably far fewer than 500. In fact, even the trade edition sold quite poorly. Livermore committed suicide the same year this book was published, too tortured by depression to enjoy the $5 million he had amassed. Accordingly, signed copies are exceptionally rare. With the owner inscription, “Property of: Constance Hazard Siegel,” founder of Hazard & Siegel, “the oldest independent broker/dealer in Central New York. It has its roots in the 1960’s as Graceffo and Siegel, and then became Hazard & Siegel in the 1970s,” at a time when she was one of the few women stock brokers in the country (Hazard & Siegel). A fine signed copy. Travel & Exploration au t um n 2014 | t r avel & e xplo r at i o n 134 india “A Just Portrait Of The Enchanting Features Of India”: With 24 Large Splendid Hand-Colored Views Of Indian Scenery 163. (INDIA) FORREST, Lieutenant-Colonel Charles Ramus. A Picturesque Tour along the Rivers Ganges and Jumna in India: Consisting of Twenty-four Highly Finished and Coloured Views… from Original Drawings Made on the Spot. London, 1824. Large quarto (10-1/2 by 13 inches), late 19th-century three-quarter red morocco gilt. $25,000. First edition of this renowned India color-plate book, boasting 24 splendidly hand-colored aquatint views after original drawings by Forrest and large folding map showing the Ganges and the Jumna, handsomely bound by J. Adams. A spectacular series of views made by Forrest during a voyage along the Ganges and its tributary the Jumna, including plates of Benares, Allahabad, Lucknow, Delhi and the Taj Mahal in Agra. With folding engraved map, hand-colored vignette title page and vignette tailpiece, and 122-page history of India. Plates watermarked 1825; Abbey notes watermarks of 1824. Tooley 227. Abbey, Travel 441. Occasional inoffensive foxing, usual light offsetting. Binding handsome. A near-fine copy of an impressive production. 135 au t um n 2014 | t r a v el & e x p l o r a t i o n john harris “A Great Collection”: 1764 Edition Of Harris’ Compleat Collection Of Voyages And Travels, Including Cortes, Drake, Magellan, And Others, Beautifully Illustrated With 61 Maps And Plates 164. HARRIS, John. Navigantium atque Itinerantum Bibliotheca; Or, a Compleat Collection of Voyages and Travels. London, 1764. Two volumes. Folio, period-style full sprinkled calf gilt. $21,000. Desirable 1764 (third) edition, revised and considerably enlarged, with 39 engraved plates and 22 magnificent engraved maps, many of which are folding. Includes descriptions of America, the South Seas, the West Indies, the North Pole, Russia, China, Africa and India. “A great collection” (Cox I, 10). Scholar, scientific writer and topographer John Harris, a distinguished member of the Royal Society, first published this work in 1705 to compete with Churchill’s 1704 collection of voyages. Harris’ work differed from his rival in aiming to provide a comprehensive history rather than simply a collection of previously published narratives. “Harris ‘edits’ these voyages by pruning, rearranging, ‘digesting’ in his own words with quotations interspersed taken from the originals. He adds some valuable and useful historical accounts of the growth of trade, habits of commerce, growth of Companies with exclusive rights, etc.” (Cox). Among the voyages included are those of Magellan, Drake, Cavendish, Cortes, Schouten, Hawkins, Narbrough and Dampier, as well as many others. “To the original extensive collection are added accounts of voyages complete since the first publication: Christopher Middleton to Hudson’s Bay, 1741-42; Bering to the Northeast, 1725-26; Woodes Roger’s circumnavigation, 1708-11; Clipperton and Shevlocke’s circumnavigation, 1719-22; Roggeveen to the Pacific, 1721-33; and the various travels of Lord Anson, 1740-44 (Hill 774, 775). Sabin 30483. Maps and plates beautiful and fine, text with just a bit of scattered faint marginal dampstaining in Volume I. Beautifully bound. 137 au t um n 2014 | t r a v el & e x p l o r a t i o n the holy l and “One Of The Great Books On The Topography Of The Holy Land” 165. (HOLY LAND) FULLER, Thomas. A Pisgah-Sight of Palestine and the Confines Thereof, with the History of the Old and New Testament acted thereon. London, 1650. Folio, contemporary full calf. $11,500. First edition of this classic work, with engraved title page, engraved armorial plate, large detailed folding map of Palestine on two sheets, 20 double-page maps—including one of Jerusalem—and seven double-page plates. Fuller’s work is noted for the splendid maps of the Holy Land, elaborately detailed with vignettes, emblems and scenes. “This curious and singular work is not a mere geographical work, but contains many things relating to Jewish antiquities, and to the manners and customs of the people” (Lowndes, 848). “Pisgah-Sight is one of the great books on the topography of the Holy Land” (Maps of the Holy Land, 130). Based on printed sources rather than actual travel, Fuller’s great work reflects the European interest at the time in the topography of the Holy Land, as well as the Ark of the Covenant, the Tabernacle, and the Temple. Wing F2455. A few early ink annotations. A few minor expert paper repairs to a few folding plates and plans. Pastedowns present but unstuck; strips of vellum cut from a charter of Richard II used to reinforce hinges. Light rubbing to corners and spine head. Internally very fine and crisp, an excellent and desirable copy in sound and attractive contemporary calf boards. au t um n 2014 | t r avel & e xplo r at i o n 138 Burton’s Scarce First Footsteps In East Africa, With Four Chromolithographs 166. (AFRICA) BURTON, Richard F. First Footsteps in East Africa; or, An Exploration of Harar. London, 1856. Octavo, early 20th-century three-quarter brown morocco gilt. $4000. First edition of one of the best and most soughtafter of Burton’s works, his account of his visit to the forbidden city of Harar and his ill-fated expedition into Somalia, illustrated with four chromolithographs and two maps. Following the legendary journey to Mecca disguised as a Muslim that made him a household name, Burton rested in Cairo and there met Johann Krapf, a pioneer explorer of East Africa. Kraft inspired Burton to attempt to become the first European to cross Africa from the Indian to the Atlantic Ocean. “To test his capacity for African exploration, Burton first made a journey to the ‘forbidden’ city of Harar in Somaliland, where the emir was reputed to execute all infidels on sight [and where it was rumored no white man had ever gone before. Disguised as he had been in Mecca, as an Arab merchant] Burton entered the city. But Harar capitulated to Burton as Jericho to Joshua. Then disaster struck. Hostile Somalis attacked the camp at Berbera. Stoyan was killed; Burton and Speke escaped with their lives but only after being within a hair’s breadth of death and having sustained terrible wounds. Ever after Burton bore on his cheek a hideous disfiguring scar where a Somali lance had transfixed his jaw” (McLynn, 59). This copy is second issue, as usual; the first issue was suppressed due to its Appendix IV, which detailed Nubian rituals of female circumcision (omitted in the second issue) and is, according to Penzer, “exceedingly rare and practically unobtainable.” Penzer, 60-63. Gift inscription. Interior fine; light rubbing to extremities. An about-fine copy. “The Most Significant American Nature Writer Before Thoreau And A Nature Artist Who Rivals Audubon” 167. (AMERICAN SOUTH) BARTRAM, William. Travels through North & South Carolina, Georgia, East & West Florida, the Cherokee Country... Philadelphia, 1791. Thick octavo, contemporary full brown tree sheep early rebacked with original spine laid down, custom box. $15,000. First edition of Bartram’s classic work, a masterpiece that “would ensure him a permanent place in American natural history,” containing frontispiece portrait of the chief of the Seminoles from a drawing by Bartram, engraved by James Trenchard, folding map of East Florida, and seven engraved botanical and zoological plates (one folding). In contemporary sheep. “William Bartram was the most significant American nature writer before Thoreau and a nature artist who rivals Audubon… Long recognized as an American classic, Bartram’s Travels recounts his journeys through the wilderness from 1773 to 1776 in prose famous for its celebratory intensity” (Library of America). “Bartram’s account of the remote frontier, of the plantations, trading posts, and Indian villages at the end of the 18th century is unrivaled” (Streeter II:1088). “He not only offers us pictures of Indian life, and sketches of the striking peculiarities of the tribes he visited, but he gives us tables of the names and localities of the numerous towns of the populous nations of the Creeks and Cherokees” (Field 94). Sabin 3870. Early inked owner signatures, penciled owner inscription. Inked date below title page imprint. Small red bibliographic notation. Interior generally fresh with light scattered foxing, minor marginal dampstaining, occasional minor expert archival tissue repairs, light edge-wear, rubbing to boards. An extremely good copy of this American classic. charles wilkes 139 “Perhaps The Greatest Achievement In The Field Of Exploration That This Country Has Ever Known” au t um n 2014 168. (AMERICAN WEST) WILKES, Charles. Narrative of the United States Exploring Expedition. During the Years 1838, 1839, 1840, 1841, 1842. Philadelphia, 1845. Six volumes (including atlas). Large octavo, original brown cloth. $13,000. t r a v el & e x p l o r a t i o n Wilkes stands alongside James Cook as the most important explorer of the Pacific; he is certainly the most important naval scientist in American history. Between 1838 and 1842 his six-vessel expedition carefully charted the expanse from the northwest coast of North America to the shores of Antarctica, from the western coast of South America to the South Pacific islands. He surveyed nearly 300 islands along with 1500 miles of the Antarctic coastline; Wilkes’ maps were so accurate that the charts were still in use for Marine landings in World War II. Wilkes also encountered natives of various cultures, many of whom are pictured in the handsome plates. Chief among the maps that accompany his narrative is the “Map of the Oregon Territory.” It extends inland past the Rocky Mountains and includes an important inset of the course of the Columbia River. The map is “in many respects the most detailed of this extensive area yet published… for the main Oregon region and the Hudson’s Bay Company territories to the north it was an accurate, really quite extraordinary, map. This map had much influence on the later maps of the area” (Wheat II, 457-58). This large-paper 1845 edition was preceded only by the first trade edition in 1844 (150 sets printed) and special limited edition (100 sets printed, 25 of which were destroyed by fire). Howes W414. Evidence of bookplate and spine label removal, tape repairs to verso of one map. An exceptional set with only occasional light foxing to plates. Rare, especially in original cloth. | Large-paper copy in original cloth of perhaps the earliest acquirable edition of “the beginning of accurate western cartography,” the narrative of Wilkes’ landmark Pacific expedition (Goetzmann, 57), with five large folding maps, nine additional maps, and 64 steel-engraved plates. One of 1000 large-paper copies, published just one year after the first edition of only 250 sets. au t um n 2014 | t r avel & e xplo r at i o n 140 charles spencer francis “One Of The Most Sought Of All Books Relating To Montana”: One Of Only 15 Copies, Inscribed By The Author In The Year Of Publication, With 48 Vintage Albumen Prints 169. (AMERICAN WEST) FRANCIS, Charles Spencer. Sport among the Rockies. The Record of a Fishing and Hunting Trip in North-Western Montana. By the Scribe. Troy, New York, 1889. Thick quarto, original publisher’s three-quarter brown morocco, custom slipcase. $55,000. Limited first edition, one of only 15 copies issued for private distribution, a collection of 25 letters authored by newspaper publisher Charles Francis, this presentation copy inscribed by him in the year of publication to “Mr. L. L. Warren, with the compliments of Charles S. Francis, Aug. 15, 1889,” featuring 48 vintage albumen prints (each five by eight inches and mounted on heavy card stock) displaying exceptional images of 19th-century Western America. This extremely scarce copy from the library of photographer and musician Graham Nash, with his signed bookplate. “One of 15 copies printed for private distribution… This is a series of 25 delightful letters written by Charles Francis for the Troy Times, telling of a hunting trip to Montana in August and September of 1888” (Streeter VII:4110). The volume’s “magnificent and important mounted original photographs… are by the author himself and constitute an immensely important record of the Far Northwest, its towns, ranches, Indians, agencies, the Baker Massacre; Trapper Bill Weaver, Piegan Indians; the Big Horn; Starvation Camp; western horses and Indian ponies; horse thieves; Blackfoot Agency; life among the Indians; cattle ranges and ranches; Great Falls, its mushroom growth, future, etc. The volume is a veritable ‘book of the plains… one of the most sought of all books relating to Montana” (Eberstadt 136:445). After assuming ownership of the Troy Times, Francis journeyed with three fellow “Trojans… to the great Northwest in search of game, fish and adventure.” Francis’ exceptional albumen prints herein express the finest qualities of 19th-century American photography, which met “the challenge of depicting a new world without a long tradition of visual models [and] engendered a realistic, vernacular style of plain expression… [with] a confidence in fact and in the eloquence of clear exposition” (Waking Dream, 124). Volumes variously bound with 48 to 49 albumen prints. Eberstadt 136445. With tipped-in bookplate of photographer and collector Graham Nash, signed by him. Bright unfaded prints, tiny bit of wear to margin of one leaf (113) and very lightest dampstaining to lower edges of some leaves without affecting plates or text; light edge-wear to original boards. An outstanding near-fine copy of this extremely scarce presentation copy in original morocco. “Revealed A Strange And Unknown World, Full Of Exciting Wonders” au t um n 2014 170. (AMERICAN WEST) LEWIS, Meriwether, and CLARKE, William. Travels to the Source of the Missouri River and Across the American Continent to the Pacific Ocean. London, 1815. Three volumes. Octavo, early 20th-century three-quarter navy morocco gilt. $18,000. 141 | “The importance of exploring this area [beyond the Missouri River] had been evident to Thomas Jefferson as early as 1783… but it was not until 20 years later that Jefferson, then President of the United States, saw the realization of his idea… The purchase of the Louisiana Territory from France in December 1803 greatly increased the importance of the expedition, which finally began its long journey [in 1804]… They wintered in the Mandan villages in the Dakotas and in the Spring pushed on west across the Rocky Mountains and then down the Columbia River to the Pacific Ocean… they arrived back in St. Louis in September 1806 to the amazed delight of the nation which had given them up for lost. Though unsuccessful in their attempt to find a transcontinental water route, they had demonstrated the feasibility of overland travel to the western coast” (PMM 272). “The Lewis and Clark expedition stands as a major event in American history… The explorations revealed a strange and unknown world, full of exciting wonders, and pointed the way to its possibilities for future development” (Downs, Books that Changed America, 40). Sabin 40830. See PMM 272. Minor reinforcement to verso of map along fold, text and maps clean and bright, morocco-gilt bindings fine. A beautifully bound copy of this classic of American exploration. “The British Provinces In America Are, Without A Doubt, The Most Flourishing And Interesting Section Of The British Colonial Empire” 171. (CANADA) BOUCHETTE, Joseph. The British Dominions in North America; or a Topographical and Statistical Description of the Provinces of… Canada. Two volumes. WITH: A Topographical Dictionary of the Province of Lower Canada. London, 1832. Together, three volumes. Quarto, contemporary full brown diced calf gilt. $6000. Second edition, with frontispiece portrait, 19 aquatint and lithographic views, including a lovely double-page prospect of Montreal, and 11 maps and plans, including a folding plan of Halifax Harbor. Together with a first edition of Bouchette’s Topographical Dictionary, issued to coincide with the release of the revised edition of The British Dominions in North America, handsomely and uniformly bound in contemporary diced calf-gilt. “This authoritative, informative guide does include personal reminiscences of 40 years as a naval, military and civilian officer” (Waterston, 51). In 1807 “Bouchette went to London to draw the authorities’ attention to the importance of establishing the boundary between Lower Canada and the United States exactly. He emphasized the need to plot the 45th parallel with accuracy… On 18 February 1814 Bouchette presented before the House of Assembly his project to produce a large-scale map of Lower Canada accompanied by a topographical dictionary” (Archive of Canada), which appeared as A Topographical Description of the Province of Lower Canada (1815). This work officially established the southern boundary from the British view. With three engraved tables at rear of Volume I. Abbey, Travel 622. Occasional marginal foxing, text generally quite clean. Minor rubbing to extremities. A very handsome copy. t r a v el & e x p l o r a t i o n Second English edition, “a reproduction, in larger type and better paper, of the Philadelphia [first] edition of 1814” (Sabin 40830), published one year after that edition, with large folding map and five additional maps. au t um n 2014 | t r avel & e xplo r at i o n 142 scotl and “Edina! Scotia’s Darling Seat! All Hail Thy Palaces And Towers” (Burns): First Edition Of Swarbreck’s Sketches In Scotland, With 25 Lovely Elephant Folio Lithographs 172. (SCOTLAND) SWARBRECK, Samuel Dukinfield. Sketches in Scotland. London, 1839. Elephant folio (15 by 21 inches), original half black morocco. $7000. First edition, with tinted lithograph title page and 24 lovely large tinted lithographs of views, street scenes and antiquities of Scotland, mostly in Edinburgh and the lowlands, after sketches made by Swarbreck during his 1837 tour. Printer and lithographer Charles Joseph Hullmandel pioneered the use of the then-new process of lithography in England. “Among the many artists who availed themselves of his processes for the reproduction of their drawings were Stanfield, David Roberts, Haghe, Nash, and Cattermole” (DNB). The lithographs he made from Swarbreck’s sketches show his masterly use of gradations of tones and highlights that give the appearance of soft watercolor washes so suited to landscape painting. Abbey, Scenery 492. Very faint marginal dampstaining and only slight pinpoint spotting to lovely plates, light wear and soiling to binding. An exceptionally good copy. Scarce. 173. (EVEREST) GREGORY, Alfred. The Picture of Everest. London, 1954. Slim quarto, original gilt-stamped Japon vellum, dust jacket. $4200. “The Most Elaborate And Comprehensive History Of Manhattan” 174. (NEW YORK CITY) STOKES, Isaac Newton Phelps. The Iconography of Manhattan Island, 1498-1909. New York, 1915-1928. Six volumes. Quarto, publisher’s threequarter vellum gilt, blue cloth boards, original cloth slipcases and chemises. $18,000. Limited first edition of this monumental history, one of 360 copies printed on English hand-made paper (of a total edition of only 402 copies), with hundreds of maps, views and architectural illustrations assembled from countless original sources. Original prospectus laid into Volume I. A fine copy, rare in this condition. “The most elaborate and comprehensive history of Manhattan” (Howes, 561). This sweeping survey presents detailed chronologies and summaries of events and personages in the history of New York City, interspersed throughout with maps, documents, photographs, engravings, and facsimiles, including charters, ordinances and proclamations, handbills, broadsides, surveys, plans, portraits and numerous illustrations relating to the history of New York from the “period of discovery” through the Dutch and English settlements and the Revolutionary and Civil Wars, the period of invention, prosperity, and progress, reconstruction, industrial and educational development, and the modern city (to 1909). The set contains more than 4300 pages with hundreds of maps and illustrations assembled from numerous original sources. Howes S1026. Expert repairs to original slipcases only. Books and plates fine. A stunning set. t r a v el & e x p l o r a t i o n The Picture of Everest includes 43 color photographs taken by Alfred Gregory, the expedition’s still photographer and an experienced mountaineer. Neate 332. Signed on the fly title by Gregory, Michael Ward, George Lowe, George Band, Michael Westmacott, Charles Evans, Charles Wylie, Wilfrid Noyce, John Hunt, Tim Bourdillon, Griffith Pugh, Edmund Hillary, and reporter James (later Jan) Morris of The Times of London. The only member of the expedition not represented here is Tom Stobart. Bookplate and ownership signature dated October 1954 of noted mountaineer George Lowe who, with those whose signatures appear here, served on Sir John Hunt’s successful 1953 British expedition of Everest. Interior fine. Blue staining to front board from dust jacket. Toning to spine of dust jacket. An extremely good copy with exceptional provenance, most scarce signed by the Everest team. | First edition of climber Alfred Gregory’s pictorial memoir of the 1953 British Everest expedition, signed on the fly title by 12 members of the expedition, including leader John Hunt and Edmund Hillary, who summited the mountain, and reporter James Morris, who covered the expedition. The copy of mountaineer and expedition member George Lowe, with his bookplate and ownership signature dated in the year of publication. 143 au t um n 2014 The Picture Of Everest, Illustrated With 34 Color Photographs, Signed By Edmund Hillary And 11 Other Everest Expedition Members And Reporter James Morris, Climber George Lowe’s Copy au t um n 2014 | t r avel & e xplo r at i o n 144 new zeal and Barraud’s New Zealand, 1877, One Of The Finest Color Plate Books Dealing With New Zealand, With 24 Large Elephant Folio Color Lithographic Views 175. (NEW ZEALAND) BARRAD, C.D. New Zealand Graphic and Descriptive. London, 1877. Elephant folio (17-1/2 by 23 inches), original three-quarter black morocco. $12,000. First edition, with 30 striking elephant folio plates, 24 of them printed in color and mounted, of scenery throughout New Zealand. One of the finest color plate books dealing with New Zealand. “From his youth Barraud had displayed artistic talent, and for the first 26 years of his life in New Zealand he travelled widely in his spare time over a large area of the North and South Islands, sketching in the various provinces, and recording his impressions of the attractions of New Zealand. Many of these sketches he worked up to a larger scale, and the climax of this activity came in 1875 when he decided to sail to England to take advice on the publication of his work. This was published in 1877 under the title New Zealand, Graphic and Descriptive... The book contained 24 full-page colour lithographs of landscapes and numerous other plain lithographs and woodcuts dealing with aspects of native life in New Zealand. Several of the lithographs are of considerable historic interest, particularly that portraying the Pink and White Terraces which were destroyed in the Tarawera eruption” (Encyclopaedia of New Zealand). Colors vivid and beautiful throughout, marginal wear and repair to margins only of last plate; boards lightly rubbed, gilt bright. A near-fine copy of this impressive production. With 16 Plates Engraved By William Blake: “One Of The Most Vivid Indictments Of Slavery Ever Penned” au t um n 2014 176. (SOUTH AMERICA) STEDMAN, J.G. (BLAKE, William, illustrator). Narrative of a Five Years Expedition Against the Revolted Negroes of Surinam, in Guiana, on the Wild Coast of South America. London, 1796. Two volumes. Quarto, late 19thcentury full speckled polished calf gilt. $8500. 145 | In 1771, Stedman volunteered to accompany an expedition sent out by the Dutch to suppress a revolt in the wealthy South American colony of Surinam (Dutch Guiana). “[Stedman’s] narrative is a model of what such a book should be… The field of his curiosity embraced not only all branches of natural history, but also economical and social conditions. His description of the cruelties practised on the negroes, and of the moral deterioration resulting to their masters, forms one of the most vivid indictments of slavery that have ever been penned” (DNB). The 16 plates engraved by William Blake “have long been recognized as among the best executed and most generally interesting of all his journeyman work” (Keynes, 98). Each of Blake’s arresting engravings successfully blends his own inner vision with Stedman’s, and include often-reproduced slave tortures, wonderfully humanoid monkeys, the skinning of a giant anaconda, and an emblematic representation of “Europe Supported by Africa & America.” Blake relied heavily on the engraving work that he did for many of Johnson’s publications to sustain him at this point in his career. Bookplate. Leaf Rr3 in Volume II with marginal paper repair. Occasional mild foxing to and offsetting from few plates, a few of which have been professionally cleaned; joints expertly repaired. A very handsomely bound copy in excellent condition. Muirhead Bone’s 120 Large Folio Illustrations Of Old Spain, Signed By Bone And His Wife 177. (SPAIN) BONE, Muirhead. Old Spain. Two volumes. WITH: Two Drypoints. London, 1936. Together, three volumes. Elephant folio (14-1/2 by 21 inches), original full brown pigskin gilt; etchings in original matching portfolio with brown paper boards. $8500. Signed limited first edition of this monumental collection of Spanish landscapes, cityscapes and interiors, one of only 265 sets, with 120 large full-page illustrations in various media (three double-page, many in color) by Muirhead Bone and descriptions by Gertrude Bone, signed by both, with the additional portfolio of two original drypoint etchings, each signed by Muirhead Bone. Originally trained as an architect, Muirhead Bone’s art “reflects the mind of the architect, an almost mathematical feeling for strains and stresses” (DNB). Bone’s preferred media were etching, dry-point and lithography. “In the art of dry-point, Bone did not, from his first attempts, take long to achieve a mastery which it was well-nigh impossible to improve upon, certainly not as a technical process” (Kenneth M. Guichard). Appointed official British war artist during the First World War, he produced 150 lithographs of the conflict, published by the War Department in 1917. For many years, the Bones lived in Italy and Spain. Inscribed in volume I by fellow Scottish artist W. Russell Flint. Laid into this copy are two autograph letters signed: one from Muirhead Bone to Flint, demonstrating the close friendship between the two, the other from Mary Bone to the recipient of this volume answering questions on Bone’s technique. A few spots to portfolio boards only, plates and text beautiful and bright. Fine condition. t r a v el & e x p l o r a t i o n First edition of Stedman’s scarce and important Narrative, with three folding engraved maps, a folding aquatint engraving, and 77 engraved plates, including 16 engraved by William Blake. 146 t r avel & e xplo r at i o n “Photographs That Are Among The Finest Made In 19th Century Italy”: Fine Large Folio Album Of 30 Lovely Carlo Ponti Original Photographs Of Venice 178. (VENICE) PONTI, Charles [Carlo]. Souvenir Photographique de Venise. Venice, circa 1890. Oblong folio, original blue cloth, all edges gilt. $5200. au t um n 2014 | Superb collection of 30 large albumen photographic prints of views of Venice. Most images measure approximately 13 by 10 inches, finely printed and mounted on heavy cardstock. “Every major Italian city—or famous locality—had its contingent of accredited photographers. Once they had acquired a firm footing, they spread out across the country and abroad… In Venice, the studio established by Carlo Naya grew enormously and turned out large-format architectural views, impressively composed. On a par with Naya was Carlo Ponti, another great publisher of topographical views of Venice” (Frizot, A New History of Photography, 159). Ponti (1823-93) was a Swiss-born photographer known as the inventor of the megalethoscope, a viewing device for photographs. “Carlo Ponti’s background as an optical-instrument maker complimented his natural artistic sensibilities, resulting in photographs that are among the finest made in 19th century Italy” (“Images of Italy,” Mt. Holyoke College Exhibition Catalogue, 1980, 50). Text in French. A few images with minor spotting or marginal toning, most quite clean and fine. A bit of darkening to original cloth. Near-fine condition, a lovely collection of photographs of one of the most beautiful cities in the world. Richly Illustrated And Finely Bound Large Folio Atlas Of Australasia 179. (AUSTRALIA) GARRAN, Andrew. The Picturesque Atlas of Australasia. Sydney and Melbourne, 1886. Three volumes. Large folio (14 by 18 inches), early full black morocco gilt. $9000. First edition of this profusely illustrated late 19th-century history of Australia, New Zealand and the South Pacific, with 23 color-printed maps (seven large folding), 41 fullpage wood-engravings, and hundreds of fine in-text woodengravings of historical scenes and personages, local customs, natural history and landscapes. This monumental history of “down under” includes maps of Tasmania, Oceania, New Zealand, the Fiji Islands and New Guinea. Numerous historical essays detail aboriginal life, as well as the European explorations and colonial settlements. Early gift inscription. Scattered light foxing, morocco-gilt binding very handsome. A nearly fine copy. Music 147 au t um n 2014 | m u s ic johann sebastian bach “Unparalleled In The History Of Music”: Bach’s Well-Tempered Clavier: Extraordinarily Rare First Edition In Contemporary Boards 180. BACH, Johann Sebastian. Das wohltemperirte Clavier, oder Präludien und Fugen durch alle Töne. Zurich, 1801-02. Two volumes. Oblong quarto, contemporary marbled boards with original leather spines rebacked and laid down, custom chemises, slipcase. $22,000. Rare first edition of both parts of Bach’s masterpiece in musical instruction, fully engraved. Bach’s Well-Tempered Clavier, a collection of 48 preludes and fugues in all the major and minor keys, occupies a pivotal position in the keyboard repertoire. Students are still required to study this work, and seasoned performers are praised for their interpretations of it. The Well-Tempered Clavier “surpasses, in logic, in format and in musical quality, all earlier endeavors of the same kind by other masters… The work shows a perfectly balanced contrast between free and strict styles, each represented by several different types of prelude and fugue. Bach’s writing… represents the culmination of a 20-year process of maturation and stands unparalleled in the history of music” (New Grove). Bach completed Part I in 1722 and Part II in 1744. After Bach’s death in 1750, the work circulated in manuscript. “In 1782 Mozart arranged several of the fugues for chamber-music combinations… and in 1783 Beethoven played the Well-Tempered Clavier at the age of thirteen in a famous performance” (Fuld, 674). The complete set of fugues reached print in 1801, when three editions were published at about the same time, all of which are considered first editions. Fuld, 118. RISM B 499. Kinsky, 120. Reversed volume numbers revised in a contemporary hand on boards, minor pencil markings (some in red) to text in Volume II. Usual wear to boards, plates bright and clean with only occasional scattered foxing. An extraordinary copy, in contemporary boards, of this landmark musical classic. Rare. “Beethoven’s Greatest Music”: First Edition Of The String Quartet Opus 130 181. BEETHOVEN, Ludwig van. Troisième Quatuor pour 2 Violons, Alte & Violoncelle… Oeuvre 130. Vienne, 1827. Folio, original unbound parts, modern portfolio. $4000. First edition in original unbound parts (published simultaneously with the full score) of Beethoven’s incomparable string quartet opus 130, fully engraved. Beethoven spent his final years writing “exclusively in the medium of the string quartet. The five late string quartets contain Beethoven’s greatest music, or so at least many listeners in the twentieth century have come to feel… The range of Beethoven’s thought in the late quartets is immense, outdistancing that of his contemporaries in every respect. Even within individual quartets Beethoven encompasses both deep seriousness and lighthearted gaiety without incongruity” (New Grove II:387; XVIII:281). Beethoven’s late string quartet in B flat (opus 130) departs radically from conventional quartet form. Its six movements range from pensive passages to profoundly emotional ones, such as the slow fifth movement, with its halting middle section marked by Beethoven “beklemmt,” or “oppressed.” Beethoven wrote of this part that it had moved him more than any other of his compositions. The quartet was originally rounded off by a long fugue, but this met with incomprehension at the quartet’s premiere. Beethoven uncharacteristically chose to bow to public opinion, and excised the fugal movement (published separately as opus 133), replacing it in the version published here with a new, lightfooted finale—the last complete piece that Beethoven ever composed. He died on March 26, 1827. Kinsky-Halm, 395. Signatures loose in first violin part, expert restoration to spine margin of spread with title page; all parts are quite fresh and clean. A beautiful copy. First Edition Of Beethoven’s Piano Sonata Number 24, Dedicated To His Likely “Immortal Beloved” 182. BEETHOVEN, Ludwig van. Sonate pour le Piano Forte composee et dediee a Madame la Comtesse Therese de Brunswick. Leipzig, 1810. Oblong folio, modern beige cloth; pp. 13. $7800. First edition, fully lithographed, of Beethoven’s Opus 78, dedicated to Therese de Brunswick, whom many historians believe to be Beethoven’s famous “Immortal Beloved.” “Whether Therese de Brunswick and Beethoven were ever affianced; whether they loved without the need of a declaratory word; whether Therese hoped in vain for that word to be spoken; whether Beethoven, conscious of his defects, shrank from speaking it; whether he feared to drag her down to his social level: none of this is known. But of their strong mutual regard there is no doubt. Therese understood all that was good and great in him, and she among all the women in Beethoven’s life was best fitted to be the mate and companion for whom he longed. There is no record of their parting; only a hint of regret long afterwards.” For years there has been a great debate over who was the intended recipient of Beethoven’s passionate letter addressed to his “Immortal Beloved”; “in the present century the verdict has been mainly in favour of Therese von Brunswick” (Blom, 545-7). Kinsky, 209. Light dampstaining (mostly marginal) throughout. Rare. “Dwarfs Any Symphony That Preceded It”: Beethoven’s Eroica Symphony, The First Edition Authorized By The Composer 183. BEETHOVEN, Ludwig van. Sinfonia eroica, composta per festeggiare il sovvenire di un grand’uomo… Op. 55. Bonn and Cologne, 1822. Octavo, modern three-quarter brown morocco gilt. $8500. First authorized edition of the full score of Beethoven’s “Eroica” Symphony, fully engraved—“still the longest extant perfect design in instrumental music.” The Eroica or Third Symphony, composed in 1804, was originally dedicated to Napoleon, whose military victories Beethoven saw as blows struck on behalf of the oppressed common man. The symphony was just finished when news arrived that the great liberator had declared himself Emperor. Beethoven was furious: “Now he too will trample on all human rights and indulge only his own ambition. He will place himself above everyone and become a tyrant.” Angrily Beethoven tore away the titlepage of the manuscript, bearing the dedication to Napoleon. The symphony as issued celebrates instead the idealized figure of “a great man” (un grand’uomo). “In expressing this heroic concept Beethoven, the idealist, produced music which for grandeur, spaciousness, majesty, eloquence, and sheer drama dwarfs any symphony that preceded it” (Cross, I:57). The full score of the Eroica was first published at London in 1809, in an unauthorized edition that is now extremely scarce; this 1822 first German edition is the first publication of the full score authorized by the composer. Stamp on title page. An excellent copy of this historic score, handsomely bound. “More An Expression Of Feeling Than A Painting”: First Edition Of Beethoven’s “Pastoral” (Sixth) Symphony 184. BEETHOVEN, Ludwig van. Sixieme symphonie Pastorale en fa majeur… Oeuvre 68. Leipzig, 1826. Royal octavo, early gray paper boards with vellum spine and corners. $8500. First edition of the full score of Beethoven’s Sixth (Pastoral) Symphony—“What a cheerful, genial, beneficent view over the whole realm of Nature and man!” (Grove, Beethoven, 227). The announcement of Beethoven’s concert of December 22, 1808 appearing a few days earlier in the Wiener Zeitung referred to “A Symphony, entitled: ‘A Recollection of Country Life.” The word “pastoral” is first found in a violin part (now in the Gesellschaft der Musikfreunde, Vienna) used at the first performance. Beethoven feared that the “program” aspect of the symphony would overwhelm the music, and he warned that the symphony was “More an expression of feeling than a painting.” Despite the composer’s admonition, the “Pastoral” is program music at its best, a vivid expression of feelings inspired by the natural world—especially the realistic birdcalls in the coda of the second movement, and the small-town brass band and “muttering of thunder” in the third movement (Sherman & Biancoli, 581). Kinsky-Halm, 163. Fuld, 560. Occasional foxing; title page remargined. Corners slightly bumped, a bit of soiling to vellum. An attractive copy. au t um n 2014 | music 150 johannes brahms First Edition Of A Major Brahms Serenade, Presentation Copy Inscribed By Him 185. BRAHMS, Johannes. Serenade D dur fur grosses Orchester componirt von Johannes Brahms. Op 11. Partitur. Leipzig, 1860. Large octavo, original green printed wrappers, cloth spine, custom chemise, slipcase. $18,500. First edition, inscribed by Brahms on the front wrapper in the year of publication and signed “J. B.” Brahms completed this major serenade while in his mid-twenties. “In 1857 he obtained his first official position when he was engaged for three months by the princely court of Detmold as pianist-in-residence and conductor of the choir society, part-time duties he performed for three years. This post provided valuable practical experience and left him enough time for his own work… (including) the two delightful Serenades for orchestra” (Karl Geiringer). In 1853 Brahms had given his first concert at Leipzig and drew the attention of the publishing firm of Breitkopf and Haertel, which undertook the publication of his compositions. Variant title page, without price beneath the publisher’s imprint. McCorkle, 31-36. Wrappers and spine with light wear, closed tear to rear cover; interior bright and fine. Very desirable inscribed. 151 au t um n 2014 | m u s ic george gershwin Inscribed By George Gershwin: An American In Paris, First Edition 186. GERSHWIN, George. An American in Paris. An Orchestral Tone Poem. Piano solo. New York, 1929. Large quarto, original printed tan paper wrappers, custom cloth clamshell box. $25,000. “The most incredibly talented, prolific, and extraordinary First edition of the piano score (preceding the full score), inscribed by Gershwin: “Sincerely—George Gershwin / Oct. 10, 1929 / New York City.” An American in Paris is one of Gershwin’s most ambitious compositions. He wrote at the time of the premiere: “This new piece, really a rhapsodic ballet, is written very freely and is the most modern music I’ve yet attempted. The opening part will be developed in typical composer of the century.” French style, in the manner of Debussy and The Six, though the themes are all original. My purpose here is to portray the impression of an American visitor in Paris, as he strolls (Michael Feinstein) about the city, and listens to various street noises and absorbs the French atmosphere.” “In An American in Paris he showed that even without studying with Boulanger he could imitate the insouciance of Les Six—the group of young composers who were all the rage in Paris—and make use of polytonal harmonies out of Stravinsky, while writing tunes that were memorable and completely Gershwinesque” (David Schiff). This copy was inscribed by Gershwin six weeks after he made his conducting debut with An American in Paris at Lewisohn Stadium of City College of New York. First edition of the piano arrangement (preceding the full score). Carnovale W3. Faint fold lines. A fine copy, very rare and desirable inscribed. au t um n 2014 | music 152 giacomo puccini The Vocal Score Of Puccini’s Girl Of The Golden West, Signed By Puccini, Toscanini And Members Of The Cast On Its Premiere At The Metropolitan Opera House 187. PUCCINI, Giacomo. La Fanciulla de West (The Girl of the Golden West). Milan, 1910. Quarto, modern half dark brown morocco, original wrappers bound in. WITH: Playbill from the first performance. Both enclosed in custom cloth clamshell box. $12,000. First edition, piano-vocal score for Puccini’s classic opera of the American West, signed by Puccini on the date of the opera’s premiere at the Metropolitan Opera House and signed as well by conductor Arturo Toscanini and various members of the original cast (Emmy Destinn, Adamo Didur, Dinh Gilly, Angelo Bada, and Giulio Rossi). Together with an original playbill for the performance. This copy is inscribed on the title page (in a hand other than Puccini’s) “To Mr. J. P. Sanborn, with the Composer’s Compliments— New York, Dec. 10, 1910,” with Puccini’s full autograph signature appearing below. The signatures of Toscanini and the cast members appear on the page listing the performers. “On his first visit to the United States, in 1905, Puccini saw a performance of David Belasco’s horse opera The Girl in the Golden West and was fascinated by the old stage wizard’s tricks with moving scenery and an elaborate snowstorm... But it was not until he had returned to Italy that he finally decided to make this play the vehicle for his next operatic score” (100 Great Operas and Their Stories, 216). The only signature absent among the cast members is that of Enrico Caruso, who performed the role of Dick Johnson. Trimmed, clipping the signatures of two of the cast members (Rossi and Bada). Hopkinson 7A. Score in fine condition, playbill with some restoration to rear wrapper and repair to inner hinges of some pages. Stravinsky’s First Great Work: The Firebird, First Edition First edition, piano score of Stravinsky’s first ballet. 189. GERSHWIN, George. Program signed, for a performance by the Seattle Symphony Orchestra. Seattle, December 15, 1936. Legal folio, one page, framed with portrait. Entire piece measures 21 by 19 inches. $4800. Fine 1936 program for the Seattle Symphony Orchestra signed by composer George Gershwin. Handsomely framed with portrait. Among the Gershwin compositions performed at the concert were Concerto for Piano and Orchestra, a suite of songs from Porgy and Bess, and Rhapsody in Blue. Fine condition. m u s ic Program Signed By George Gershwin, 1936 | The Firebird is the work which first earned Stravinsky a reputation beyond Russia’s borders. The ballet draws on Russian folk-tales, bringing together the Romantic interest in the supernatural and in nationalist feeling. “Stravinsky worked on his music for a year, usually aided by Fokine, who had prepared the scenario. ‘They worked very closely together, phrase by phrase,’ wrote Lincoln Kirstein in his biography of Fokine… Stravinsky completed his score in May 1910, and on June 25 L’Oiseau de Feu (The Fire-Bird) was presented at the Paris Opéra with Fokine, Madame Fokina, and Karsavina as the principal dancers… On the opening night Debussy rushed backstage to embrace Stravinsky” (Cross, II: 779). The Firebird, in its Tchaikovskian and Rimskian lushness, stands in stark contrast to the spare, restrained works of Stravinsky’s later, “neo-classical” period, and he was eventually to repudiate it. Yet he reworked it into an orchestral suite in several different versions, and continued to perform it throughout his career. The score for piano was published about the same time as the full score, “priority uncertain” (Fuld, 142). De Lerma, O9. Small stamps of Parisian dealers on front wrapper and title page. Interior fine, with only light spotting to title page, text block expertly reinforced; only light wear to fragile wrappers. Near-fine condition. au t um n 2014 188. STRAVINSKY, Igor. [Russian title in Cyrillic.] L’Oiseau de Feu. Conte Dansé en 2 Tableaux. Moscow, 1910. Large quarto, original printed wrappers, custom chemise and slipcase. $10,000. 153 Art, Architecture & Illustrated au t um n 2014 | a r t, a r c h i t e c t u r e & i l l u s t r at e d 154 james joyce / henri matisse Signed By Both Joyce And Matisse: The First Illustrated Edition Of Ulysses 190. JOYCE, James (MATISSE, Henri, illustrator). Ulysses. With Illustrations by Henri Matisse. New York, 1935. Large quarto, original gilt-stamped brown cloth, custom chemise and slipcase. $35,000. First illustrated edition of Joyce’s landmark Ulysses, one of only 250 copies (from a total edition of 1500) signed by both James Joyce and Henri Matisse. One of the 20th-century’s most desirable illustrated books, combining the work of two great modern artists. A fine copy. One of the most arresting and intriguing collaborations in 20th-century literature. The 26 beautiful full-page illustrations by Matisse accompany the text of Joyce’s Ulysses, including six soft-ground etchings with reproductions of the sketches on blue and yellow paper. “One of the very few American livres de peintres issued before World War II. According to George Macy [this work’s designer], who undertook this only American publication of Matisse’s illustrations, he asked the artist how many etchings the latter could provide for $5000. The artist chose to take six subjects from Homer’s Odyssey” (Artist and the Book 197). Without original cardboard slipcase. Slocum & Cahoon A22. LEC 71. Fine condition. Most scarce and desirable signed by both Joyce and Matisse. 155 au t um n 2014 | a r t , a rchi t ec t u re & ill u s t r a t e d the rose garden of persia “The Softest And The Richest Language In The World Is The Persian”: The Rose Garden Of Persia, First Edition, Elegantly Bound By De Sauty 191. COSTELLO, Louisa Stuart. The Rose Garden of Persia. London, 1845. 12mo, early 20th-century full crushed green morocco gilt. $8000. First edition of Costello’s translations of Persian poetry, with works of many poets, including Hafez, Rumi, and Omar Khayyam, featuring 12 illuminated pages, beautifully bound in full, elaborately gilt-tooled crushed morocco by de Sauty. An accomplished painter of miniatures and copyist of illuminated manuscripts, Costello also published several well-received volumes of lyrical poetry. The renditions of selections from famous Persian poets in this book are “highly ornamented with decorative borders”—each page of text is within red ornamental frames in one of eight designs, and 12 pages are printed in blue or green, red and gold—“deriving from original manuscripts held by the Asiatic Society… Her paraphrases of sections of the Quatrains of ‘Umar Khayyam… compare creditably with the celebrated translation by Edward Fitzgerald” (DNB). Elegantly bound by Alfred de Sauty in full crushed morocco featuring large and lovely gilt arabesques with small, floral red inlays to both boards. Celebrated for his elegant and intricate tooled bindings, de Sauty was active in London until 1923; he then moved to Chicago and worked for the bindery of R.R. Donnelley. Allibone, 432. A fine copy, beautifully bound. au t um n 2014 | a r t, a r c h i t e c t u r e & i l l u s t r at e d 156 goya Goya’s Masterpiece Desastres De La Guerra: Extraordinary 1863 First Edition, One Of Only 500 Copies, Complete With 80 Original Etchings 192. GOYA Y LUCIENTES, Francisco José de. Los Desastres de la Guerra. Madrid, 1863. Two volumes. Total of 80 numbered and titled copperplate etchings done with drypoint, burin, aquatint and lavis, on wove paper with watermark J.G.O. and palmette. Oblong folio, contemporary half red morocco gilt. $225,000. “The greatest antiwar manifesto in the history First edition, second issue, of “the most brutally savage protest against cruelty and war which the visual imagination of man has conceived”—one of only 500 copies in the first printing. Fine, early impressions, with tonal variations in the lavis that disappear in later editions. Napoleon’s invasion of Spain in 1807 and 1808 brought about the abdication of the Bourbon of art.” –Robert Hughes rulers and sparked violent protests against the French. During the war years, Goya vented his horror and outrage at the atrocities committed by soldiers and compatriots alike: “In 80 small, compact images, each etched with acid on copper, Goya told the appalling truth. He aimed a high-power beam on hideous sights: guerillas shot at close range; the ragged remains of mutilated corpses; and the emaciated victims of war’s partner famine. Never before had a story of man’s inhumanity to man been so compellingly told, every episode reported with the utmost compassion, the human form described with such keen honesty and pitying respect” (Goya in the Metropolitan Museum of Art, 25-26). “Nothing in art reflects with more terrible emphasis the horrors of war than Goya’s Desastres de la Guerra… As a satirist he may be misanthropic 157 au t um n 2014 and bitter… but in the unflinching courage with which he probes right to the heart of social rottenness he proves himself the true satirist who battles with abuses” (Hind, 255-56). Perhaps because Goya did not intend to see Desastres through publication, the series as a whole is somewhat less coherent than the two series of prints Goya issued while alive, Los Caprichos and Tauromaquia. Plates 2-47 depict scenes of war, possibly as witnessed by Goya during his travels to and from Zaragoza in 1808, but most likely from newspaper and other accounts; plates 48-64 record the famine that ravaged Madrid from 1811-12, done shortly thereafter; the remaining 16 images are more fantastic, politically satirical images, which have been variously dated, most likely from circa 1815-17. As the subjects and themes evolved throughout the creation of Desastres, so did the artist’s approach, moving from a highly detailed style to a much less finished technique. “He still stands as one of the greatest virtuosi of an art which had only been introduced a few years before his work commenced” (Hind, 252). This work is most scarce and extremely difficult to obtain, as over the years copies have found their way to museums or to print dealers. This first edition has appeared at auction only four times in the last 25 years. This is a second-issue copy of the first printing, with corrections to the captions of plates 9, 3236, 39 and 47. Harris Ib. A beautiful copy in fine condition with clean, sharp impressions. au t um n 2014 | a r t, a r c h i t e c t u r e & i l l u s t r at e d 158 “The Same Religious Force As The Bible Itself”: First American Edition Of Chagall’s Second Series Of Bible Illustrations, With 96 Heliogravures And 24 Color Lithographs 193. CHAGALL, Marc. Drawings for the Bible. New York, 1960. Folio, original pictorial boards, dust jacket, shipping carton. $12,500. Rare first American edition of Chagall’s second series of illustrations for the Bible, with 96 black-and-white heliogravures, as well as 24 color lithographs prepared by Chagall especially for the present work and printed by Mourlot Frères. This breathtaking blend of Chagall’s childhood experience of the world of the Hebrew Bible as “another world that still existed behind the world of workaday reality” began with his experience in Palestine during a 1931 trip. His illustrations constitute an “astonishing unity of word and image, of visual representation and nonvisual suggestion… The picture is not there to cover, sustain or adorn the event, but to report it plainly and yet in all its temporal and eternal significance… Chagall’s Bible etchings have the same religious force as the Bible itself” (Meyer, 383, 388, 393). The massive undertaking occupied Chagall off and on from 1931 to 1956, and again between 1958-59 (this edition). Printer Fernand Mourlot ran a lithography press where such greats as Braque, Matisse, Picasso, Miró and, of course, Chagall came to have their designs printed and to learn about this still nascent medium. With an introduction by Gaston Bachelard, translated by Stuart Gilbert. Appeared simultaneously from Verve in French, also in a trade edition. Sorlier 75. See Cramer 42. Only two very small closed tears to bright and beautiful dust jacket. A fine copy, in the original shipping carton. Jerusalem Windows, Boldly Inscribed By Chagall, With Two Original Color Lithographs 194. CHAGALL, Marc. Vitraux pour Jerusalem. Monte Carlo, 1962. Folio, original gray raw silk, photographic endpapers, dust jacket, acetate, slipcase. $9800. First French edition of Chagall’s Jerusalem Windows, boldly inscribed by Chagall and dated 1965, with two original full-color lithographs specially prepared by Chagall for this edition and with numerous beautiful color lithographic reproductions of the artist’s work. Illustrated are various drafts as well as the final versions of the 12 stained glass windows (one for each of the tribes of Israel) and designed by Chagall for the synagogue of the HadassahHebrew University Medical Center. Issued the same year as the very similar English-language edition titled Jerusalem Windows. Text in French, See Sorlier, Chagall 78; Sorlier, Chagall Lithographs 365-66; Cramer 49. Small notation to corner of slipcase. A fine inscribed copy. “His Strongest Illustrations”: 1893-94 First Edition Of Beardsley’s King Arthur, His First Illustrated Book 195. (BEARDSLEY, Aubrey) MALORY, Thomas. The Birth, Life and Acts of King Arthur, Of His Noble Knights of the Round Table… London, 1893-4. Two volumes. Quarto, original ivory cloth. $5000. First edition, one of only 1500 copies of the two-volume issue, with 16 full-page and four double-page illustrations, 43 borders, and 288 in-text decorations. “William Morris’ view of a book as a unified work of art … resulted in the production of several profusely decorated Malorys… An immediate response to the Kelmscott books was J.M. Dent’s Morte Darthur (1893-94),” containing illustrations and embellishments “by the then-unknown Aubrey Beardsley. Though a Burne-Jones influence was evident in the early chapters, Beardsley soon developed the Art Nouveau style... his knights, lethargic and spiritless, are completely dominated by their mistresses and the fays. Far from glorifying chivalric romance, Beardsley satirized it, shocking Victorian sensibilities” (Lacy, 46). The work won him “instant recognition… The Malory drawings are his strongest illustrations” (The Artist and the Book 16). Originally published in two issues, both in 12 separate parts: 300 numbered copies in gray wrappers, (later bound in three volumes, usually full vellum); and 1500 copies in green wrappers (later bound in two gilt-decorated cloth volumes, as here. Bookplates. Interiors lightly embrowned. Inner paper hinges partly split; bindings sound. Cloth slightly darkened and soiled, bright gilt only lightly rubbed. An extremely good copy of the scarce first edition of this beautiful production. “Only Poe Could Have Written The Poems. Only Dulac Could Have Illustrated Them”: Limited Edition Of The Bells, With 28 Color Plates By Dulac, Signed By Him 196. (DULAC, Edmund) POE, Edgar Allan. The Bells and Other Poems. New York and London, circa 1912. Tall quarto, original full vellum gilt. $3800. Signed limited first edition, one of 750 copies signed by Dulac, illustrated with 28 brilliant mounted color plates and Dulac’s gilt bell motif on the deluxe vellum binding. A striking departure from Dulac’s work to this point, his watercolors for The Bells were “overstreaked with gilt in some cases, crayon in others, to produce rich haunting effects… [One contemporary review declared,] ‘Sometimes Dulac’s pictures are deep-colored and intense, sometimes dim and ghost-like. But one and all are sensitized to record impressions of unearthly beauty or horror. Only Poe could have written the poems. Only Dulac could have illustrated them’” (Hughey 29). This collection contains “Annabel Lee,” “The Raven,” “Ulalume,” “Tamerlane” and 42 other poems. Without original silk ties. A fine signed copy. au t um n 2014 | a r t, a r c h i t e c t u r e & i l l u s t r at e d 160 “The Most Authoritative Artist And Poet Of Modern Arabia”: Signed Limited Edition Of Kahlil Gibran’s Twenty Drawings, 1919, One Of Only 100 Copies Specially Bound And Autographed 197. GIBRAN, Kahlil. Twenty Drawings. New York, 1919. Folio, original white Japanese paper spine, gold Japanese paper boards.$9000. Signed limited first edition, one of 100 copies signed by Gibran, beautifully illustrated with a color frontispiece and black-and-white drawings by Gibran. Best known for his poetry, Kahlil Gibran was a gifted artist, having studied with Rodin in Paris. This first volume of Gibran’s artwork in English (and only his second book published in the United States) contains 20 of his early works, primarily of nudes. “When Twenty Drawings was published by Alfred A. Knopf in 1919, it was reviewed as having drawings ‘of graceful emotional exposition of form” (The Nation, 1922). This title sold only a few hundred copies at the time of publication, and Gibran continued to toil in obscurity until the publication of The Prophet in 1923, also illustrated by Gibran, which became the third best-selling work of poetry of all time. Front inner paper hinge split, plates fine; a bit of toning and wear to binding as usual. An extremely good copy. Rare. “Commitment To The Human Spirit”: Scarce Association Copy Of Heath’s Dialogue With Solitude 198. HEATH, Dave. A Dialogue with Solitude. New York, 1965. Quarto, original gray cloth, original dust jacket. $6000. First edition of Heath’s seminal photobook, featuring 82 vibrant duotone plates, this scarce association copy signed by photographer Margery Lewis Smith, longtime partner of this book’s dedicatee, renowned photographer W. Eugene Smith. Shortly after its publication in 1965, Dave Heath’s Dialogue with Solitude was recognized as one of the decade’s most important photobooks. “Working under the heady influences of Robert Frank, Aaron Siskind and Eugene Smith, Heath forged a style that felt at once intimate and reportorial… Dialogue with Solitude is a period piece that resonates” (Village Voice). “A book that has achieved cult status,” Heath’s photobook is particularly noted for its attempt “to photograph internal emotions… [by investigating] the essential solitude of an individual through a series of sequences” (Parr & Badger II:104). This notable copy is from the library of photographer Margery Lewis Smith and is signed by her. Smith was the longtime partner of the book’s dedicatee W. Eugene Smith, who is paid further tribute in Heath’s preface, praising him as one who “chose, as an affirmative value of life, engagement in and commitment to the human spirit.” Book fine; small closed tears, light rubbing to bright near-fine dust jacket. A near-fine copy with a notable association. “A Major Role In Changing The Character Of The American City” Zora Neale Hurston’s Stories, Illustrated By Betye Saar, One Of Only 300 Copies Signed By Saar 200. HURSTON, Zora Neale. Bookmarks in the Pages of Life. A Selection of Short Stories… with Serigraphs by Betye Saar. New York, 2000. Folio, original publisher’s three-quarter brown morocco and patterned paper boards, uncut. Housed in publisher’s cloth clamshell box. $4200. Signed limited first edition of this selection of Hurston’s stories, illustrated with six lovely folio serigraphs by Betye Saar. One of only 300 copies signed by Saar. This selection brings together six of Hurston’s best stories— “Magnolia Flower,” “Mother Catherine,” “High John De Conquer,” “The Conscience of the Court,” “The Bone of Contention,” and “Now You Cookin’ with Gas”—each illustrated with one of Saar’s serigraphs, which are colorful prints of collages made using fragments of fabric, paper and faded photographs. Tiny bump to clamshell box. A splendid production in fine condition. a r t , a rchi t ec t u re & ill u s t r a t e d “One of the most prolific commercial architectural firms in the history of American architecture” (ANB). To noted historian Carl Condit, “Graham, Anderson, Probst & White were among the leaders of their profession. Their work covered the full spectrum of urban building... all of it done at the highest level, from Beaux-Arts Classicism to Art Deco.” The firm and its architects “played a major role in changing the character of the American city between 1910 and 1930” (Chappell, 2). Their stellar commitment to Chicago was exemplified “through such buildings as the Field Museum of Natural History, Union Station, the Wrigley Building, the John G. Shedd Aquarium, the Civic Opera Building, and the Merchandise Mart. The firm was known throughout America by such other buildings as the Equitable Building and Chase National Bank in New York” (ANB).A fine copy of a magnificent production. | Signed limited first edition, one of only 300 copies signed by Edward E. Probst and Marvin G. Probst and presented to Ernest F. Brunknow, the firm’s structural engineer, two majestic folio volumes containing 389 folio photogravures, drawings and diagrams of some of the most famous buildings in America—“all done at the highest level from Beaux Arts to Art Deco”—in publisher’s full morocco by Sangorski & Sutcliffe. au t um n 2014 199. GRAHAM, Ernest and PROBST, Edward et al. The Architectural Works of Graham Anderson Probst & White. London, 1933. Two volumes. Folio, original full crushed brown morocco gilt, custom slipcases. $9500. 161 au t um n 2014 | a r t, a r c h i t e c t u r e & i l l u s t r at e d 162 cats “Time Spent With Cats Is Never Wasted”: Splendid Large Folio Original Signed Color Aquatints Of Cats By Jacques Nam, With Engaging Texts By Colette 201. NAM, Jacques Lehmann and COLETTE, (Sidonie-Gabrielle). Chats. Paris, 1950. Large original portfolio (18 by 21 inches) with cloth spine and illustrated front board, containing six loose folio gatherings and five original aquatints (as issued). $16,500. Limited first edition, one of only 350 copies, of five wonderful portraits of cats, each signed and numbered by Jacques Nam, accompanied by amusing commentaries by Colette. “Time spent with cats is never wasted” (Colette). Jacques Nam was known primarily for his paintings and illustrations of animal subjects, mostly cats, which found their ways into the Salon d’Automne and the National Gallery of Beaux Arts. Colette’s works “express a sensibility shaped by the style of the belle époque and informed by a sensual responsiveness to the life of nature and the world of childhood” (Drabble, 213). Text in French. Plates and text fine, original portfolio lightly soiled. A beautiful copy. 202. LACLOS, Pierre Choderlos de. Les Liaisons Dangereuses. Londres [i.e., Paris], 1796 [i.e., 1812]. Two volumes. Octavo, early 20th-century full plum morocco gilt. $8500. “One Of The Greatest Of American Illustrated Books”: Fine First Edition Of The Knave Of Hearts 203. (PARRISH, Maxfield). SAUNDERS, Louise. The Knave of Hearts. New York, 1925. Folio, original black cloth, mounted cover illustration, glassine. $5500. First edition of “one of the greatest of American illustrated books” (Porter, 84), the last and most lavish book illustrated by Maxfield Parrish, with mounted cover design, pictorial endpapers, 14 full-page color plates and nine in-text color illustrations. A beautiful copy. By 1900, Maxfield Parrish had become “recognized as one of America’s most successful artists, achieving national popularity for his distinctively elegant style, detailed backgrounds and glowing colors” (Dalby, 42). He agreed to illustrate his friend Saunders’ play “on account of the bully opportunity it gives for a very good time making the pictures. Imagination could run riot, bound down by no period, just good fun and all sorts of things” (Yount, 86-88). Without very scarce box. Yount, 86-91. Cotsen 9724. Bookseller ticket. Book nearly fine, with only a few spots of faint foxing, very minor creasing to plate at page 10, and slight soiling to rear cloth. Some chipping to scarce glassine. A beautiful copy. a r t , a rchi t ec t u re & ill u s t r a t e d This splendid edition of Laclos’ Les liaisons dangereuses is the novel’s most renowned illustrated edition. These two volumes display 15 engravings by the most skilled engravers of the era, images that richly convey Laclos’ eroticized view of a struggle for power at the heart of French aristocracy. First issued only seven years before the French Revolution, this “underground classic… [is] so perfect a construction of a drama through letters that no one… has ever been able to rival Laclos’ mastery of the genre. It is a perfection that for several reasons may make Les liaisons dangereuses… the best, the most extreme, and the last of its kind” (Hollier, 537-43). This edition’s “striking plates by Monnet and Mlle. Gérard form the outstanding contemporary interpretation of Les liaisons dangereuses. They are not likely to be superseded, however often this celebrated novel is illustrated” (Ray 82).Text in French. Ray 82. Owner signatures. Spines gently toned. Fine condition, beautifully bound. | Scarce illustrated edition of Laclos’ masterpiece, with 15 full-page engravings (including two frontispiece plates) that “form the outstanding contemporary interpretation” of this celebrated novel of sexual intrigue, very handsomely bound in rich morocco-gilt. 163 au t um n 2014 “The Best, The Most Extreme, And The Last Of Its Kind”: Scarce 1812 Edition Of Laclos’ Erotic Masterpiece, The Most Famous Illustrated Edition, With 15 Engraved Plates au t um n 2014 | a r t, a r c h i t e c t u r e & i l l u s t r at e d 164 joan miró Extraordinary Complete Set Of Ten Striking Miró Color Lithographs, Eight Double-Page, With Numerous Additional Illustrations, One Of Only 100 Copies Boldly Signed By Miró 204. MIRÓ, Joan. Tapis de Tarragona. Barcelona, 1972. Fifteen singlefolded sheets loose in lithographic self-wrapper, cloth chemise and slipcase. $7800. Rare complete set of ten quarto color lithographs (eight double-page) by acclaimed modern artist Joan Miró, also featuring numerous additional illustrations, one of only 100 copies boldly signed on the limitation page by Miró. This work deals with the lithographs for Miró’s iconic tapestry, Tapís de Tarragona, the only remaining Miró piece of its size since the only other comparable work was destroyed in the World Trade Center. Here, piece by piece, in accessible quarto size, one can see the details that went together to form basis for the final tapestry. This beautiful set of lithographs features eight double-page color lithographs laid loose inside self-wrappers which also feature lithographs on the front and rear covers (a total of ten lithographs). The lithographs are printed on Guarro paper and the full sheets, unfolded, measure 12-1/4 inch by 9-1/8 inch. Beautifully published by Sala Gaspar of Barcelona, the images have been enriched by text written by Rafael Orozco, Maria Lluisa Borràs and Josep Royo. The total edition of this work (signed and unsigned) was 1200 copies. Text in Catalan, Spanish, French, and English. A beautiful and rare signed item in fine condition. The magnum opus of Isaac Ware, independent architect and draughtsman to the board of Windsor and Greenwich, later master of the Carpenter’s Company. “A massive compendium, this volume codified the existing mid-18th-century ideas on architecture, summarizing Burlingtonian Palladian tendencies, but including as well a variety of other views… Ware makes his aim clear in his preface, stating that ‘by these means we hope to lay down in one body the whole science of architecture, from its rudiments to its utmost perfection; and that in a manner which shall render every part of it intelligible to every reader” (Avery). Fowler 436. Engraved armorial bookplate. Just a touch of rubbing to corners; text and plates clean and fine. A splendid volume. Oscar Wilde First Edition, The Black Sun Press—A Beautiful Copy 206. WILDE, Oscar. L’Anniversaire de l’Infante. Illustrations par Alastair. Paris, 1928. Folio, original cream paper wrappers, glassine, marbled slipcase. $8500. Rare limited deluxe first edition, one of only 10 copies on Japon Impérial out of 110 printed, with nine full-page illustrations by Alastair and published by Harry and Caresse Crosby’s Black Sun Press. This special edition of Wilde’s “The Birthday of the Infanta,” originally published in English in The House of Pomegranates in 1891, was designed entirely by Alastair, with nine full-page and numerous marginal illustrations by him. “Alastair” was the pseudonym of Baron Hans Henning Voight, German-born artist, dancer and mime, who derived his provocative style of illustration directly from Aubrey Beardsley. His pictures are known for their combination of “decorative elegance with a fascination with the perverse, sinister and satanic” (Peppin & Micklethwait). Caresse and Harry Crosby’s Black Sun Press “is one of those happy combinations of husband and wife working together, which always lend added charm to a private press and they make a point of providing interesting illustrations” (Ransom, 178). With forward by Harry Crosby. Text in French. Book fine, illustrations vivid and beautiful. Only light edge-wear to original glassine and slipcase. A fine copy. Rare. a r t , a rchi t ec t u re & ill u s t r a t e d First edition of this magnificent treasury of architecture, “one of the best known of 18thcentury architectural text-books,” with engraved frontispiece and 114 finely engraved architectural plates, many folding, and including many designs of the great 17th-century architect Inigo Jones. Beautifully bound in finely restored contemporary calf-gilt. | 205. WARE, Isaac. A Complete Body of Architecture. London, 1756. Tall, thick folio, contemporary full tan speckled calf expertly rebacked with original elaborately gilt-decorated spine neatly laid down. $8800. 165 au t um n 2014 “A Massive Compendium,” With 114 Fine Large Folio Engraved Plates, Including The Designs Of Inigo Jones au t um n 2014 | a r t, a r c h i t e c t u r e & i l l u s t r at e d 166 Inscribed And Signed By Andy Warhol With His Trademark Drawing Of A Broken Heart 207. WARHOL, Andy. Andy Warhol’s Exposures. New York, 1979. Tall quarto, original black cloth, dust jacket. $3200. First trade edition, American issue, of Warhol’s candid and engaging photobook, featuring 360 full-page halftones, boldly inscribed in black felt pen by him on the half title, “To Cliff,” with Warhol’s trademark sketch of a broken heart and signed with his flourish. “I don’t think Studio 54 is like pagan Rome. I think it’s like junior high school.” This collection of Warhol’s photographs includes wonderful sections on President Jimmy Carter, Truman Capote, Dali, Studio 54 and numerous celebrities, artists and musicians. The impromptu artistry of Exposures and other photobooks, expressing “the freewheeling existential exuberance and energy of Warhol… [became] a primary inspiration for the Japanese photobook” (Parr & Badger II:144). “My idea of a good picture,” Warhol writes here, “is one of a famous person doing something unfamous. It’s being in the right place at the wrong time.” Preceded by a signed limited edition of 1000 copies in full morocco. Published the same year as the English issue. Small scratch to rear panel of colorful dust jacket. An about-fine inscribed copy. Inscribed, Signed And Initialed By Andy Warhol, With An Original Sketch By Him Of A Campbell’s Soup Can 208. WARHOL, Andy. The Philosophy of Andy Warhol (From A to B and Back Again). New York and London, 1975. Octavo, original half orange cloth, dust jacket. $4000. First edition, first printing, inscribed on the half title, “To Ellie” and signed by Andy Warhol, with an original sketch of a Campbell’s soup can inscribed “Soup” by him; additionally initialed by him “AW” in black felt tip ink, perpendicular to his signature. The father of pop-art waxes philosophic about art (“An artist is somebody who produces things that people don’t need”), beauty (“Beautiful people are more prone to keep you waiting than plain people are…”) and success (“Think rich. Look poor”). Expected light bleed-through from Warhol’s initials to title page. Book fine, dust jacket near-fine with slight wear to top edge of front panel, minor dampstaining to edges visible only from verso. Desirable signed, initialed and inscribed by Warhol with an original, iconic sketch. Fifty Photographs, Limited First Edition Initialed And Additionally Inscribed Edward Weston “I Have Been A Little Out Of Sorts Myself…”: Scarce Letter Signed By Frank Lloyd Wright 210. WRIGHT, Frank Lloyd. Typed letter signed. Taliesin, Spring Green, Wisconsin, April 8, 1943. One page, oblong narrow octavo, matted and framed with a portrait. Entire piece measures 18-1/4 by 11-1/2 inches. $4000. Fine typed letter signed by the great architect, discussing a building project, finely framed with a photograph of Wright. Wright’s letter is addressed to Jim Smith, secretary of Cooperative Homesteads, Inc., in Royal Oak, Michigan, and reads, “I have been a little out of sorts myself. But I intended to get to Detroit and let you have a man a little later when the coast is clear. Aaron’s suggestions (raising the utilities-floor, concentrating more on saturated earth than ramming, change in framing) were made by myself to Aaron who passed them on to you. I will come over for a day as soon as I can.” Fine condition, handsomely framed. a r t , a rchi t ec t u re & ill u s t r a t e d To many Edward Weston is “the quintessential 20th-century American photographer” (Grove Encyclopedia of American Art, 194). “Possibly no one in our time has explored so many facets and recorded so many aesthetic possibilities” (Merle Armitage). “I do not know any formal rules of composition,” Weston writes in his Epilogue, “nor do I recognize any boundaries to subject matter. Subject matter is everywhere: it may be an old shoe, a cloud, or my own backyard.” With essays by Robinson Jeffers, Merle Armitage, Donald Bear, and Weston himself, Fifty Photographs reflects Weston’s remarkable range as a photographer, from vast landscapes to intimate portraits, none of which had previously appeared in book form. “It makes visible the real legacy of Weston’s work, the way it influenced so much of what would come after” (Roth, 128). Open Book, 150. Jack Nisberg was a highly respected fellow photographer whose images regularly appeared in Look, Newsweek, Vogue and The New York Times. Text and images fine, light edge-wear to boards, loss to spine ends and edges of very scarce dust jacket. An extremely good inscribed copy. | Signed limited first edition, one of 1500 copies initialed by Weston, this copy additionally inscribed by him on the copyright page, “Inscribed for Jack Nisberg, Cordially Edward Weston 5-26-’50,” containing Weston’s own selection of his 50 “favorite photographs,” none previously appearing in book form. au t um n 2014 209. WESTON, Edward. Fifty Photographs. New York, 1947. Quarto, original half black cloth, dust jacket. $4000. 167 au t um n 2014 | a r t, a r c h i t e c t u r e & i l l u s t r at e d 168 “Better To Reign In Hell Than Serve In Heaven” 211. (DORÉ, Gustave) MILTON, John. Milton’s Paradise Lost. London and New York, 1866. Large folio (13 by 17-1/4 inches), contemporary full red morocco gilt. $4500. First edition of Doré’s interpretation of Paradise Lost, with 50 stunning full-page folio engravings, “matched only by his illustrations for Dante’s Inferno,” very handsomely bound in full crimson morocco-gilt by A.W. Bain. Only Doré’s illustrations for Dante’s Inferno match his work on Paradise Lost in epic scope and acute lyric sensitivity. In his designs for this volume, we see full-blown the Romantic reading of Milton— as a celebrator of radical genius—that drew the poets of the Romantic movement to Milton, and a half-century of book illustrators to Doré. “None can dispute the fact that here, as in all other works he has attempted to interpret, Doré stands as a giant among his contemporaries and predecessors” (New York Times). A beautiful about-fine copy in rich morocco gilt. “The Timelessness Of These Rocks And These Hills”: Signed Limited Edition Of Andrew Wyeth’s Paintings Of Pennsylvania And Maine 212. (WYETH, Andrew) MERYMAN, Richard. Andrew Wyeth. Boston, 1969. Oblong folio, original half light blue reverse calf, clamshell box. $5800. Deluxe signed limited first edition, one of only 300 copies, with 165 full-page color and black-and-white reproductions of Wyeth’s paintings of Pennsylvania and Maine. In the tradition of his father, N.C. Wyeth, and the Brandywine artists, Andrew Wyeth achieved acclaim for his naturalistic portrayals of the Pennsylvania countryside and the seacoast of Maine. His watercolors and tempera paintings capture the essence of the two regions, while conveying a sense of loneliness and nostalgia. “I can do an awful lot of thinking and dreaming about the past and future—the timelessness of these rocks and hills—about all the people who have existed here.” After the prints were completed and approved by Wyeth for this volume, the original plates were destroyed. Spine lightly rubbed. Fine condition. 169 au t um n 2014 C hildren ’s Literature | C hil d re n ’ s li t er a t u re c . s . lewis “The Most Sustained Achievement In Fantasy For Children By A 20th-Century Author”: Scarce Complete First Edition Set Of C.S. Lewis’ Chronicles Of Narnia, In Original Dust Jackets 213. LEWIS, C.S. Chronicles of Narnia. London, 1950-56. Together, seven volumes. Octavo, original colored cloth, dust jackets. $49,000. First editions of all seven books in Lewis’ cherished Chronicles of Narnia, “intoxicating to all but the most relentlessly unimaginative of readers,” all in original dust jackets. Generally excellent condition. Lewis is likely best remembered for his beloved fantasy series, the Chronicles of Narnia. Lewis was “concerned to do for children what he had done for an adult readership in his science fiction… to re-imagine the Christian story in an exciting narrative context… [The Narnia books are] intoxicating to all but the most relentlessly unimaginative of readers, and must be judged the most sustained achievement in fantasy for children by a 20th-century author” (Carpenter & Pritchard, 370). “The stories are unforgettable not only for the excitement and suspense of the adventures but also for the strong emotions they describe so well… [and they are] further enriched by Lewis’ skillful use of language” (Silvey, 406). Unlike most fantasy series, “each book has something new and different “Narnia! It’s all in the to offer and there is no weakening of either inspiration or interest” (Eyre, 132). All seven books were “illustrated by Pauline Baynes in delightful fashion. She was also responsible wardrobe just like I told you!” for the now amazingly rare gray dust wrapper” of the first book (Cooper & Cooper, 206). “Adored by children and academics alike, these books are extremely collectible, sought-after and scarce” (Connolly, 186). Fantasy and Horror 5-176. Owner signatures, gift inscriptions. Booksellers’ small tickets in Dawn Treader and Horse. Small inkstamp to rear pastedown of Last Battle. Books near-fine to fine, a few books with light toning to spines and extreme edges of boards. Dust jackets extremely good to fine, minor restoration to Caspian and Silver Chair dust jackets. Complete first edition sets of the Narnia books are increasingly scarce and most desirable. au t um n 2014 | Chil dren’s l it er at ure 170 “Now I’m The Grandest Tiger In The Jungle!”: First American Edition Of The Story Of Little Black Sambo 214. BANNERMAN, Helen. The Story of Little Black Sambo. New York, [1900]. 16mo, original half tan cloth, pictorial paper boards. $3500. First American edition, published the year after the first, of Bannerman’s “intensely amusing and imaginative little story” (Connolly, 31), featuring 27 fullpage color-printed wood engravings by the author. “Bannerman wrote this story during a long railway journey to India… When first published in October 1899, [it] was a revolutionary-style picture book… The format of the book encouraged its handling by young owners, and the pages alternated between text and illustrations in a manner very appealing and appropriate to its compact size… Very few copies of the original printing have survived” (Schiller, 381-6). The first edition numbered only 500 copies. After much controversy surrounding the priority of early American editions, scholarly consensus now holds this edition to be the first. Barton, 116-17. Interior clean and fresh, binding sound and strong. Boards lightly rubbed. A near-fine copy. First Issue Of Through The Looking-Glass, Beautifully Bound In Full Onlaid Morocco-Gilt By Wood 215. CARROLL, Lewis. Through the Looking-Glass, and What Alice Found There. London, 1872. Small octavo, late 19th-century full onlaid green morocco gilt; original cloth bound in. $4500. First edition, first issue, of Carroll’s second Alice volume, with 50 illustrations by John Tenniel, beautifully bound in full green floriated onlaid morocco-gilt by Wood. A sequel to Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland, Through the LookingGlass “equals its predecessor in the brilliance of its nonsense, and features many characters who quickly became immortals of children’s literature… the Red Queen, the White Queen, Tweedledum and Tweedledee, Humpty Dumpty, and the White Knight” (Carpenter & Prichard, 527). With 50 woodcut illustrations and frontispiece by John Tenniel. First issue with misprint “wade” on page 21. Williams, Madan & Green 82, 84. Bookplate of Percival Merritt, the accomplished book collector known primarily for his extensive Walpole collection. Interior generally quite nice, light rubbing to binding, toning to extremities. A lovely copy in near-fine condition. “In Memory Of A Glorious Sound-Filled Week” First edition of Goldman’s most popular book, his loving lampoon of swashbuckling fantasy; this presentation copy inscribed by him to Joseph Mayer, ADR supervisor for the beloved 1987 film adaptation, “8 May 87. For Joe Mayer, In memory of a glorious sound-filled week. God bless, William Goldman.” “Now, My Dears… Don’t Go Into Mr. McGregor’s Garden”: First Trade Edition Of The Tale Of Peter Rabbit 217. POTTER, Beatrix. The Tale of Peter Rabbit. London and New York, 1902. 16mo, original gray paper boards rebacked with original spine laid down, custom chemise and clamshell box. $12,000. First trade edition—among the earliest issues, with first-state text and earliest endpapers—of Potter’s first book, one of the most popular of not only her but also all children’s tales, with 30 charming color illustrations. In 1893, young Beatrix Potter, on holiday with her parents in Scotland, composed a letter to cheer Noel, the child of her former governess, who was suffering from rheumatic fever. “My dear Noel,” she began, “I shall tell you a story about four little rabbits, whose names were Flopsy, Mopsy, Cottontail and Peter…” The Tale of Peter Rabbit was born. Undaunted by multiple publishers’ rejections, Potter published the first two private editions of Peter Rabbit at her own expense, both editions totaling only 450 copies—which immediately sold. Publisher Frederick Warne agreed to print the first trade edition of Peter Rabbit and presented for the first time the now-familiar format of Potter’s books: the earlier black-and-white line drawings replaced by fullcolor illustrations and the famous prancing image of Peter mounted on the front cover. “There are no recognizable differences between the first three printings, except that green boards were introduced after the first printing” (Linder, 421). First-state text with “wept big tears” on page 51, gray leaf pattern endpapers and illustrations removed from later editions. Without scarce original dust jacket. Quinby 2. Early ink owner gift inscription. Pencil owner signature. Light scattered soiling and marginal finger-smudging, expert restoration to binding. An extremely good copy. Rare. | C hil d re n ’ s li t er a t u re Goldman satirizes the familiar fairy tale formula—“Fighting… Revenge… Beasts of All Natures and Descriptions”—in this book-within-a-book, a unique blend of slapstick comedy and wistful sentiment. Goldman also wrote the screen adaptation for the popular 1987 movie of the same title, directed by Rob Reiner. With vintage publicity piece laid in. Joseph A. Mayer’s career in Hollywood as an ADR (automated dialogue replacement) and sound supervisor and editor includes not only The Princess Bride but also such films as Ferris Bueller’s Day Off, Beaches, Glory, Pretty Woman, Natural Born Killers and Pleasantville. Owner signature. Book about-fine with slight creasing to lower portion of first few pages, very minor soiling toward lower edge of front board. Dust jacket lightly rubbed with faint creasing to front panel and flap. A near-fine copy, scarce and desirable signed by Goldman, particularly with such excellent association and provenance. au t um n 2014 216. GOLDMAN, William. The Princess Bride. New York, 1973. Octavo, original gray cloth, dust jacket. $4000. 171 au t um n 2014 | Chil dren’s l it er at ure 172 antoine de saint- e xupery Rare Signed Limited First Edition Of Saint-Exupery’s Le Petit Prince, One Of Only 260 Copies 218. SAINT-EXUPERY, Antoine de. Le Petit Prince. New York, 1943. Small quarto, modern full pictorial brown morocco. $16,500. Signed limited first edition in the original French of Saint-Exupery’s masterpiece, one of only 260 copies signed by him on the tipped-in limitation page. “[The name of] Antoine de Saint-Exupery… endures… because of a rather strange little book he wrote just before he died… Figuratively speaking, the tale has something of Hans Christian Andersen in it, something of Lewis Carroll, and even, it may perhaps be said, a bit of John Bunyan. It is often lyrical… sometimes profound… However it is classified, The Little Prince has entered children’s literature, in the manner of quite a few other such hard-to-define works in the preceding centuries” (Pierpont Morgan, 224). Because SaintExupery disappeared in a reconnaissance flight over the Mediterranean in 1944, signed copies of The Little Prince, his most famous work and the last published during his lifetime, are very desirable. This signed limited first edition in French is even scarcer than the simultaneously published signed limited first edition in English, of which only 525 copies were printed. Pearlman, 27. Occasional light soiling. A lovely signed copy. Wonderful Large Original Sketch Of Snoopy, Signed By Schulz “Peanuts first appeared in October 1950 in eight daily newspapers. The feature was immediately popular and was soon picked up by hundreds of other newspapers throughout the country. By the end of the decade Schulz had become arguably the best-known cartoonist in the United States… By the time of Schulz’s death [in 2000] he had drawn a total of 18,250 Peanuts strips, and the cartoon was syndicated in 2600 newspapers worldwide, appearing in 21 languages in 75 countries” (ANB). Snoopy, based on one of Schulz’s own dogs, has become one one of the most beloved members of the Peanuts gang. This charming image features a smiling Snoopy. A fine original Schulz sketch. “I’m The First Beagle On The Moon!”: Six Peanuts Apollo Moon Landing Comic Strips On One Poster, Inscribed And Signed By Schulz For Apollo 13 Astronaut Jack Swigert 220. SCHULZ, Charles M. Poster signed. No place, circa 1969. Broadside, 16-3/4 by 21-3/4 inches. $3500. Six “Peanuts” Apollo Moon Landing comic strips on one sheet, each depicting Astronaut Snoopy, inscribed by Schulz to Apollo 13 astronaut Jack Swigert, “For Jack– Charles M. Schulz.” Two months after these strips originally appeared, Apollo 10, with Lunar Module Snoopy and Command Module Charlie Brown, went to the Moon. These six four-panel strips originally ran the week of March 10-15, 1969, four months before Apollo 11, the first manned moon-landing mission. Each strip features Snoopy wearing a space helmet. Two months after these six comic strips ran, on May 18, 1969, Apollo 10 was launched from Cape Kennedy. The mission encompassed all aspects of an actual crewed lunar landing, except the landing. It was the first flight of a complete, crewed Apollo spacecraft to operate around the moon. From the estate of Apollo 13 astronaut Jack Swigert. A few minor wrinkles, fold lines. Near-fine condition. | C hil d re n ’ s li t er a t u re Original sketch of a smiling Snoopy sitting in the grass, rendered in black marker, signed by Charles Schulz. au t um n 2014 219. SCHULZ, Charles M. Original sketch of Snoopy signed. No place, no date. Single piece of cardboard, measuring 8 by 10 inches, framed. $6500. 173 au t um n 2014 | Chil dren’s l it er at ure 174 “The Whole Contour Of The Child’s Hidden World”: First Edition Of A Child’s Garden Of Verses 221. STEVENSON, Robert Louis. A Child’s Garden of Verses. London, 1885. 12mo, early 20th-century full brown crushed morocco. $4000. First edition of Stevenson’s delightful and influential book of children’s verse, “the first sizable group of poems to… capture a child’s quality of imagination, sense of wonder and intense enjoyment of experience.” Handsomely bound in full morocco by Bumpus. “The power of this collection of simple verses lies in the fact that it… shows that life which a child lives within himself, and takes so completely for granted that he seldom speaks of it, usually because he cannot… Stevenson has here recaptured not only a part, but the whole of that hidden life, and has set those recollections forth in just the terms that children would use, could they put them into words at all… They were the first sizable group of poems to… capture a child’s quality of imagination, sense of wonder, and intense enjoyment of experience” (Meigs, 293-4, 408). Prideaux 14. Hayward 297. A lovely, fine copy of this desirable children’s classic. First Edition Of The Trumpet Of The Swan, E.B. White’s Last Children’s Book, Inscribed In The Year Of Publication By Him 222. WHITE, E.B. The Trumpet of the Swan. New York, 1970. Octavo, original blue cloth, dust jacket. $11,500. First edition of E.B. White’s third and final children’s book, with lovely illustrations by Edward Frascino, inscribed in the year of publication using his nickname: “Ann with love (and in sorrow) Andy White. N. Brooklin. Aug 1970.” “White’s last book for children, published almost 20 years after Charlotte’s Web, is the unlikely tale of Louis, a mute trumpeter swan (named for Louis Armstrong), who compensates for his muteness by becoming a virtuoso player of a real trumpet… As he had done with Charlotte’s Web, [White] researched his material thoroughly— making inquiries about everything from the annual migration of trumpeter swans to the workings of the swan boats in the Boston Public Garden— and he wrote the text with the same scrupulous attention to detail… E.B. White has won a place in the hearts of the young forever” (Silvey, 677-78). Without the Spring Festival Book Award sticker found on most first edition dust jackets and, hence, quite desirable. Anderson, 5. See Cotsen 11943. This copy of The Trumpet of the Swan is inscribed by White as “Andy,” indicating a close friendship with the recipient. Andy was E.B. White’s nickname, which he acquired at Cornell. White graduated from Cornell in 1921. Cornell tradition holds that any male student with the surname White is given the nickname Andy after Cornell co-founder Andrew Dickson White. Book near-fine, with only faint stain to edge of text block, and slight foxing to cloth. Corner-clipped dust jacket bright and fine. A most desirable inscribed copy. 175 au t um n 2014 | C hil d re n ’ s li t er a t u re walt disney Extraordinary Snow White Illustrated Storybook, First Edition, 1937, One Of Only A Handful Of Known Copies Signed By Walt Disney And 51 Of The Snow White Animators 223. (DISNEY STUDIOS). Walt Disney’s Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs. New York and London: Harper & Brothers, 1937. Slim folio, original half cloth, dust jacket. $48,000. First edition of this wonderfully illustrated storybook of the first full-length animated feature film, with numerous full-page and in-text color illustrations, boldly signed on the front free endpaper and title page by Walt Disney and 51 of the 64 animators who contributed to the ground-breaking movie. Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs graced the screen in 1937 as Disney’s defiance of the prevailing industry wisdom that “animation could never sustain a feature-length film. Disney proved [critics] spectacularly short-sighted” (Silvey, 204). Disney originally intended to spend half a million dollars on production, but ultimately spent $1.5 million. He was therefore eager to take advantage of the significant European presence of RKO, his distributor. On September 5-6, 1938, RKO held its first International Sales Convention at the Hotel George V in Paris, inviting 24 potential European distributors. The agenda included a screening of Snow White. For this important two-day business meeting, Disney orchestrated the signing of a number of copies of the book version of Snow White to be given as gifts. He signed boldly at the bottom of the title page, instructing the movie’s animators and other creative personnel to sign the title page and opposite, as well as on the front free endpaper. This is one of those few, wonderful signed copies, boasting, in addition to Disney’s, signatures from 51 of the film’s 64 principal creators. The majority of images for Snow White have been attributed to noted artist Gustaf Tenggren, whose signature appears at the top of the front free endpaper (verso). In addition to Tenggren, signees include six others of the nine lead animators, later affectionately called by Disney his “nine old men.” Boards lightly rubbed. Bright original dust jacket lightly rubbed with small repair to rear panel. An excellent copy, one of only a handful known to exist, of this extraordinary prize of Disneyana. Index A ADAMS, John 69, 90 CHURCHILL, Winston 99, 126 FREEMAN, Douglas Southall 69 ALLEN, Maury 108 CLARKE, James Stanier 123 FREUD, Sigmund 128 American Revolution 82–83, 87–88 CLARKE, William 141 FRIEDMAN, Milton 130 ARAGO, François 52 CLARKSON, Thomas 86 FULLER, Thomas 137 AUSTEN, Jane 14 CODY, William F. “Buffalo Bill.” 86 M ay 2014 | index 176 B BACH, Johann Sebastian 147 BANNERMAN, Helen 170 BARRAD, C.D. 144 COLETTE, Sidonie-Gabrielle 162 CONAN DOYLE, Arthur 16 COOPER, James Fenimore 15 COSTELLO, Louisa Stuart 155 CUSTER, George A. 91 BARTRAM, William 138 G GALILEI, Galileo 57 GARBO, Greta 109 GARRAN, Andrew 146 GERSHWIN, George 151, 153 GIBRAN, Kahlil 160 BEARDSLEY, Aubrey 159 D GOLDMAN, William 171 BEETHOVEN, Ludwig van 148–149 DAGUERRE, Louis 52 GONDI, Jean François 120–121 BEN-GURION, David 127 DARWIN, Charles 48–52 GORDON, William 92 BERNHARDT, Sarah 108 DE QUINCEY, Thomas 17 GOYA 156–157 Bible 115, 124–125 DICKINSON, John 81 GRAHAM, Benjamin 131 BLACK, Fischer 129 Dictionary 22 GRAHAM, Ernest 161 BLACKSTONE, William 79, 116 Disney Studios 175 GRAY, John 130 BLAKE, William 14, 145 DONNE, John 13 GREGORY, Alfred 143 BOCCACCIO, Giovanni 11 DORÉ, Gustave 125, 168 GROSE, Francis 116 BONE, Muirhead 145 DULAC, Edmund 159 BOUCHETTE, Joseph 141 BRADY, Mathew 72 BRAHMS, Johannes 150 BRANDO, Marlon 47 BURTON, Richard F. 138 BYRON 15 C CAESAR, Gaius Julius 119 CALMET, Dom Augustin 115 CARADOC OF LLANCARFAN 118 CARROLL, Lewis 170 CARSON, Rachel 56 CHAGALL, Marc 158 CHANDLER, Raymond 26 CHAUCER 12 H E HANCOCK, John 92 EINSTEIN, Albert 53–56 HARDY, Thomas 19 EISENHOWER, Dwight D. 99, 107 Harper’s Weekly 71 ELIOT, T.S. 28, 32 HARRIS, John 136 EMERSON, Ralph Waldo 18 HEATH, Dave 160 EVERETT, Edward 63, 68 HEMINGWAY, Ernest 34–37 F FALCONER, Ian 171 FAULKNER, William 29 FITZGERALD, F. Scott 27 FLEMING, Ian 30–31 HERZL, Theodor 112 HOBBES, Thomas 114 HOLINSHED, Raphael 117 HOMER 17 HURSTON, Zora Neale 161 FORREST, Charles Ramus 134–135 I FORSTER, E.M. 32 ISABELLA, Queen of Spain 122 FRANCIS, Charles Spencer 140 FRANKLIN, Benjamin 58–59 SHAKESPEARE, William 7–11 JACKSON, Thomas J. “Stonewall” 70 MILTON, John 21, 168 SMITH, Adam 113 JEFFERSON, Thomas 73, 81, 89, 93 MIRÓ, Joan 164 SMITH, William 97 JOHNSON, Samuel 3 MITCHELL, Margaret 41 STEDMAN, J.G. 145 JOYCE, James 33, 154 MONTAIGNE 114 STEINBECK, John 43 MONTESQUIEU, Charles 111 STEVENSON, Robert Louis 174 index K MONTGOMERY, Bernard Law 99 STOKES, Isaac Newton 143 KEATS, John 4 MORE, Thomas 20 STRAVINSKY, Igor 153 KENNEDY, John F. 93, 94–95 MURRAY, James 22 STUART, J.E.B. 66–67 KEPLER, Johannes 57 SWARBRECK, Samuel 142 KEROUAC, Jack 37 N KEYES, Geoffrey 102, 104–106 NAM, Jacques Lehmann 162 KEYNES, John Maynard 132 NAPOLEON BONAPARTE 120–121 T NELSON, Lord Horatio 123 The Child's Rights 99 NEWTON, Isaac 60, 61 THOREAU, Henry David 23 L LACLOS, Pierre Choderlos de 163 SWINBURNE, Algernon 23 TOCQUEVILLE, Alexis de 85 LAFOREST, Nicholas-Laurent 122 P LAWRENCE, D.H. 38 PAINE, Thomas 74–78 LAWRENCE, T.E. 39 PARRISH, Maxfield 163 V LEE, Harper 40 PARUTA, Paulo 123 VOLTAIRE 113 LEE, Richard Henry 74 PATTON, George S. 100–102 VONNEGUT, Kurt 45 LEE, Robert E. 72 PERSHING, John J. 100 LEWIS, C.S. 169 POE, Edgar Allan 20, 159 LEWIS, Meriwether 141 PONTI, Charles 146 LINCOLN, Abraham 63–65, 68 POTTER, Beatrix 172 LIVERMORE, Jesse L. 133 PROBST, Edward 161 LOCKE, John 112 PUCCINI, Giacomo 152 LONDON, Jack 39 PYNCHON, Thomas 44 M R WHITMAN, Walt 25 MADISON, James 73 RIDGWAY, Matthew 103 WILDE, Oscar 46, 165 Magna Carta 110 ROOSEVELT, Eleanor 103 WILKES, Charles 139 MALORY, Thomas 159 ROOSEVELT, Franklin Delano 96 WILLIAMS, Tennessee 46, 47 MALTHUS, Thomas Robert 132 ROOSEVELT, Theodore 97 WILSON, Bill 128 MARIE ANTOINETTE 120, 122 ROSEBAULT, Charles J. 101 WOOLF, Virginia 44 MARSHALL, George C. 100 ROTH, Henry 42 WORDSWORTH, William 24 M’ARTHUR, John 123 MARVELL, Andrew 5 MATISSE, Henri 154 MENDELEEV, Dmitrii 61 MERYMAN, Richard 168 S SAINT-EXUPERY, Antoine de 172 SAUNDERS, Louise 163 SCHULZ, Charles M. 173 TRUMAN, Harry 85 W WARE, Isaac 165 WARHOL, Andy 166 WASHINGTON, George 84 WAYNE, John 109 WESTON, Edward 167 WHITE, E.B. 174 WRIGHT, Frank Lloyd 167 WYETH, Andrew 168 M ay 2014 MILLER, Arthur 41 | 177 J Thomas Jefferson’s Autograph Letter to his Bookseller, Item 103. 535 madison avenue , nyc grand canal shoppes , the venetian | the palazzo, las vegas 1608 walnut st, philadelphia www. baumanrarebooks . com 1- 800 -97- bau m a n