A Selection of Fine and Rare Books for the Holiday Season Catalogue 102 Winter 2006 For further information, please contact us via email, telephone, or post. Full descriptions and additional photographs are available on our web site: http://www.davidbrassrarebooks.com. Also contact us if you would like to be added to our mailing list to receive catalogues and special offers. A list of your current interests will help us provide you with the personalized service we feel every one of our clients deserves. We would love to have you come to our offices and browse our exclusive inventory. Please contact us for an appointment. We are located in Calabasas, in the beautiful San Fernando Valley of Southern California. David Brass Rare Books, Inc. 23901 Calabasas Road · Suite 2060 · Calabasas · California · 91302 http://www.davidbrassrarebooks.com · [email protected] Office 818-222-4103 · Fax 818-222-6173 This catalogue was prepared by our cataloguer Nancy Ruppert, technologist and photographer Fernando Alves, and president David Brass, with help from Caroline Brass, Debra Brass, and Steve Gertz. Victor Adam’s “New Enigmatical Alphabet” 1. ADAM, V[ictor]. Nouvel Abécédaire en Enigmes. Paris [and] New-York: [n.d., ca. 1840]. Folio. Hand-colored lithographed title and twenty-six hand-colored lithographed plates, heightened with gum arabic, each containing numerous humorous vignettes. Lithographed “Explication des Sujets composant L’abécédaire en énigmes/Explanation of the Subjects composing The Enigmatical abecedary” at end. Contemporary half dark green roan over green moiré paper boards decoratively tooled in gilt. Minor rubbing to extremities. Minimal foxing and soiling. An excellent copy of this extremely scarce series of plates. DB 00636. $5,500 First Edition of Jane Austen’s “Mansfield Park” 2. [AUSTEN, Jane]. Mansfield Park: A Novel…London: 1814. First edition. Three twelvemo volumes. Bound without the advertisement leaf (pp. [355-356)] at the end of Volume III, but with the half-title in each volume. Early twentieth-century antique-style mottled calf gilt by Bartlett & Co. of Boston. Some foxing and browning. Clean tear neatly repaired to two leaves in Volume III, a few additional small marginal tears or expert repairs. Early ink signature washed from half-title of each volume. An excellent copy. DB 00234. $22,500 maroon morocco gilt over pink cloth boards. Small neat leather repair to rear cover of Volume I, top corners of Volume III very slightly bumped. Some minor browning and slight offsetting, heavier on the French etching paper, as usual. Tiny dampstain in the upper corner of most plates, minor dampstaining at the lower edge of Volume II. An excellent copy. “If he had never illustrated another book, this edition of Morte D’Arthur could stand as a monument of decorative book illustration” (John Lewis, The Twentieth Century Book, pp. 148-149). DB 00521. $5,500 Signed by All Four of the Beatles and with an Autograph Note Signed by Paul McCartney 6. [BEATLES]. The Beatles Illustrated Lyrics. Edited by Alan Aldridge. [New York: 1969]. First American edition. Signed by all four of the Beatles on the half-title. Quarto. With photographs and illustrations by contemporary artists offering their interpretations of Beatles songs. Original turquoise paper over boards. In the original color pictorial dust jacket (jacket price-clipped, with minor edgewear and browning). With an Autograph Note Signed from Paul McCartney to Leslie Bricusse on five slips of paper taped R.M. Ballantyne’s “Pirate City” 3. BALLANTYNE, R.M. The Pirate City. An Algerine Tale…With Illustrations. London: 1874. First edition, later issue (with advertisements undated). Small octavo. Original maroon cloth with front cover decoratively stamped in black, back cover decoratively bordered in blind, and spine pictorially stamped and lettered in gilt. Early ink ownership inscription on front pastedown. A near fine copy. Ballantyne researched his books from life, “so as to achieve greater verisimilitude…For Pirate City (1874) he went to Algiers and dressed himself as an Arab” (The Oxford Companion to Children’s Literature). DB 00588. $650 Inscribed by Vicki Baum 4. BAUM, Vicki. Grand Hotel. Translated by Basil Creighton. Garden City, New York: 1931. First American edition (first published in German in 1929 as Menschen im Hotel). Presentation copy, inscribed by the author on the front free endpaper: “To Mrs/Bertha Musch/Vicki Baum.” Octavo. Original blue cloth ruled in blind and lettered in gilt. Slight fading to board edges at top and bottom, minimal rubbing to spine extremities. A near fine copy. In the original pictorial dust jacket (jacket with minimal edgewear and light rubbing to rear panel). DB 00490. $850 The “Superior Issue” on Dutch Handmade Paper of Beardsley’s “Morte Darthur” 5. [BEARDSLEY, Aubrey, illustrator]. MALORY, Sir Thomas. The Birth, Life, and Acts of King Arthur, of His Noble Knights of the Round Table, Their Marvellous Enquests and Adventures, the Achieving of the San Greal, and in the End, Le Morte Darthur…[London]: 1893-1894. First edition. One of 300 numbered copies of the “superior issue” on Dutch handmade paper (this copy unnumbered), out of a total edition of 1,800 copies. Three quarto volumes. Two photogravure frontispieces on India paper mounted, eighteen wood-engraved plates printed on French handmade etching paper (five double-page), numerous wood-engraved text illustrations, chapter headings, borders, and initials. One of several copies bound for H. Sotheran in near contemporary three-quarter together and affixed to the front pastedown containing the lyrics to an unpublished song. Laid in is an Autograph Note Signed by Leslie Bricusse: “‘The Beatles Illustrated Lyrics’ Signed by all four Beatles—John Lennon, Paul McCartney, George Harrison and Ringo Starr—and containing a note from Paul to me after he, Linda & their children stayed at ‘Villa Saint-Paul’ in France during the summer of 1980—together with the world’s only copy of ‘The Bricusse Marching Song’, found pinned in my bathroom cupboard.” DB 00023. $37,500 A Wonderful Contemporary Binding 7. [BIBLE IN ENGLISH. NEW TESTAMENT]. The New Testament of Our Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ…Edinburgh: 1642. [Bound with:] The Whole Book of Psalmes, With the Prose in the Margin … London: 1649. Two small octavo volumes bound in one. Contemporary London binding of dark brown goatskin decoratively paneled in gilt. All edges gilt. Silver hasps attached to new leather straps and silver catch pins. Minimal rubbing. Head of spine lightly chipped. Slight dampstain in the lower margin of the last twelve leaves. Pencilled signature on front flyleaf. Early ink signature on second front flyleaf. A wonderful example in an attractive and well-preserved binding. DB 00710. $7,500 A Fine Pair of Early Eighteenth-Century Scottish “Herring-Bone” Bindings 8. [BIBLE IN ENGLISH]. The Holy Bible, Containing The Old and New Testaments…Edinburgh: 1719. [Together with:] The Psalms of David In Metre…Edinburgh: 1716. Bound in two twelvemo volumes. parts in one large folio volume. Engraved pictorial general title, engraved portrait of John Brown, engraved frontispiece portrait of “The Redeemer” in The New Testament, hand-colored engraved map, uncolored engraved plan, sixty-eight hand-colored engraved plates, and one uncolored engraved plate. Contemporary navy polished calf decoratively panelled in gilt and blind. Minor rubbing to board edges and corners. Tiny tear to lower blank margin of general title, short tear to outer blank margin of another leaf. Some scattered light foxing, slight offsetting from the plates, a few leaves very slightly browned. A fine copy, crisp and clean, in a wonderful contemporary binding. “In 1778 [Scottish divine John Brown’s (1722-1787)] best-known work, the ‘Self-interpreting Bible,’ was published at Edinburgh…[It] contains history, chronology, geography, summaries, explanatory notes, and reflections—in short, everything that the ordinary reader might be supposed to want. It is a library in one volume” (D.N.B.). DB 00011. $5,500 First Edition of “Lorna Doone,” with an Autograph Letter Signed by R.D. Blackmore Early eighteenth-century Scottish bindings of black goatskin. Covers decoratively tooled in gilt with a large central herring-bone pattern, spines decoratively tooled in gilt compartments with four raised bands, all edges gilt. Corners very slightly bumped. Closely cropped, just affecting some headlines. A wonderful example. Individually chemised and housed together in a cloth slipcase with morocco tips. This copy is described and illustrated in Bookbinding in the British Isles, Maggs Bros. Ltd., Catalogue 1075 (Spring 1987), no. 139. DB 00714. $6,500 10. BLACKMORE, R.D. Lorna Doone: A Romance of Exmoor…London: 1869. First edition. Three small octavo volumes. Bound without the preliminary blank leaf in Volume I and the final blank leaf in Volume III, but with the sixteen-page publisher’s catalogue, dated March, 1869, at the end of Volume III. Bound by Bayntun-Rivière in full red morocco gilt. Spines very slightly sunned. A few mostly marginal tears or repairs. Some occasional minor foxing or soiling. Bookplate on front pastedown of each volume. Overall, an excellent copy. Laid in is an Autograph Letter Signed from Blackmore to James Payn, Teddington, Decr. 3rd. 1877, thanking him for his assistance in the publishing of his works. Payn was a literary adviser for Smith, Elder & Co. DB 00726. $6,500 John Brown’s “Self Interpreting Family Bible,” in a Fine Contemporary Binding 9. [BIBLE IN ENGLISH]. The Self Interpreting Family Bible, with an Evangelical Commentary by the Late Revd. John Brown, Minister of the Gospel at Haddington. Containing Marginal References & Reflections. Embellished with Elegant Engravings. [Bound with:] The New Testament of Our Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ…London: [n.d., ca. 1832]. Two Captain Bligh’s Own Account of the Mutiny on the “Bounty” 11. BLIGH, William. A Narrative of the Mutiny, on Board His Majesty’s Ship Bounty; and the Subsequent Voyage of Part of the Crew, in the Ship’s Boat, from Tofoa, One of the Friendly Islands, to Timor, a Dutch Settlement in the East Indies…London: 1790. First edition of Captain Bligh’s own account of the mutiny on the Bounty. Large quarto. Folding engraved plan and three engraved charts (two folding and printed on pale blue paper). Original blue boards, neatly rebacked at an early date. A couple of very small expertly repaired marginal tears. Some light foxing, browning, and offsetting. A spectacular and very large copy. Housed in a quarter morocco clamshell case. “The most famous voyage in recent history…In 1792 [Bligh’s] narrative was revised in the official account of the Bounty’s voyage published in London by George Nicol, A Voyage to the South Sea” (Wantrup, p. 128). DB 00503. $25,000 The “True Tale” of an Australian Bushranger Gang, Led by the Englishman Captain Starlight 12. BOLDREWOOD, Rolf. Robbery Under Arms. A Story of Life and Adventure in the Bush and in the Goldfields of Australia. London: 1888. First edition. Three octavo volumes. Original green cloth with front covers decoratively stamped in black and spines ruled and lettered in gilt. London: 1707. Sixteenth edition (first published in 1678). Twelvemo. Engraved frontispiece and fifteen full-page woodcut illustrations. In the original binding of contemporary sprinkled sheep. A few small holes in the spine, one neatly repaired. One leaf with tiny paper flaw, just affecting a couple of letters. Early ownership inscriptions in red and black ink of a John Cooke, variously dated 1709-1728, none offensive. A superb copy of this scarce edition. DB 00631. $7,500 First Editions of “Alice” and “Through the Looking-Glass” in Beautiful Zaehnsdorf Exhibition Bindings 16. CARROLL, Lewis. Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland. With Forty-Two Illustrations by John Tenniel. London: 1866 [i.e., November 1865]. Second (first published) edition. [Together with:] Through the Looking-Glass, and What Alice Found There. With Fifty Illustrations by John Tenniel. London: Spines very slightly darkened, with a few tiny splits to cloth at extremities, hinges neatly repaired. Minimal foxing and soiling. Volume I with short tear to upper blank margin of one leaf. Overall, an excellent copy of this “true tale” of a bushranger gang, led by the immigrant Englishman Captain Starlight, and narrated by an ex-bushranger awaiting execution for his crimes. DB 00655. $7,500 The Bremer Presse Edition of Ralph Waldo Emerson’s “Nature” 13. [BREMER PRESSE]. EMERSON, Ralph Waldo. Nature. [New York: 1929]. One of 250 numbered copies for Random House, New York, out of a total edition of 530 numbered copies. Small folio. “Printed by hand on Zanders hand-made paper…Title and initials designed by Anna Simons” (Colophon). Original quarter vellum over decorative boards. Spine lettered in gilt. Bookplate on front pastedown. A fine copy. In the original publisher’s red cardboard slipcase (a little rubbed). DB 00467. $550 One of 100 Copies Signed by René Bull 14. [BULL, René, illustrator]. MÉRIMÉE, Prosper. Carmen. Translated by A.E. Johnson…London: [n.d, 1916]. Edition de Luxe. Limited to 100 copies, signed by the artist. Quarto. Color frontispiece and fifteen color plates. Black and white text illustrations. Original vellum over boards pictorially stamped in gilt. All edges gilt. Spine a little darkened. Otherwise an excellent copy. DB 00095. $1,750 A Lovely Copy of an Early Eighteenth-Century Edition of John Bunyan’s “Pilgrim’s Progress” 1872 [i.e., December 1871]. First edition, first issue, with the misprint “wade” for “wabe” on p. 21. Two small octavo volumes. Wood-engraved text illustrations. Uniformly bound by Zaehnsdorf in crimson morocco decoratively tooled in gilt. Zaehnsdorf exhibition stamp in gilt on rear pastedown. Some very minor foxing. Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland with a few neat marginal repairs. Overall, an excellent set. Housed together in a cloth slipcase. DB 00097. $11,000 One of 100 Presentation Copies of “The Nursery Alice,” Inscribed by Lewis Carroll on March 25, 1890 17. CARROLL, Lewis. The Nursery “Alice.” Containing Twenty Coloured Enlargements from Tenniel’s Illustrations to “Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland”…London: 1890. Second (first published) edition. Presenta- 15. BUNYAN, John. The Pilgrim’s Progress From This World To That which is to Come…The Sixteenth Edition, with Additions of New Cuts. tion copy, inscribed by the author on the half-title to his great nephew, William Hume Hitchcock (1885-1950), in his characteristic purple ink: “For Hume,/from the Author./Mar. 25. 1890.” Quarto. Twenty wood engraved illustrations by Edmund Evans, enlarged from the originals and printed in color. Original cream-colored glazed pictorial boards with cream-colored cloth backstrip. Boards very slightly soiled and rubbed at extremities. Minimal foxing to edges and endpapers. A near fine copy. On 25 March 1890, Carroll wrote in his diary: “managed to go to London, to write in over a hundred copies of The Nursery Alice” (The Diaries of Lewis Carroll, p. 477). DB 00533. $18,500 Vincent Figgins’s Facsimile of William Caxton’s “Game of the Chesse” gilt. Spines uniformly and attractively sunned to brown. A near fine set. This is one of the most important early nineteenth-century English editions of Don Quixote. DB 00623. $3,000 Churchill’s “Marlborough” Bound in Full Morocco 20. CHURCHILL, [Sir] Winston S. Marlborough: His Life and Times. London: [1933-1938]. First edition. Four octavo volumes. Illustrated with 114 illustrations in photogravure, fourteen facsimiles (some folding), and 196 maps and plans (some folding, some with color). One of 18. [CAXTON, William]. FIGGINS, Vincent. The Game of the Chesse, by William Caxton. Reproduced in Facsimile from a Copy in the British a few sets bound identically to the signed limited edition of 155 copies in publisher’s full orange morocco by Leighton-Straker for Sotheran. Front cover stamped in gilt with the arms of Marlborough, spines lettered in gilt with five raised bands, top edge gilt. Spines slightly faded. An excellent set. DB 00607. $4,500 Museum. With a Few Remarks on Caxton’s Typographical Productions…London: 1860. Second edition of Figgins’s facsimile edition of the 1482 Westminster Caxton edition. Small folio. Twenty-four woodcut illustrations. Publisher’s deluxe binding of antique-style brown calf over bevelled boards. Covers decoratively bordered in blind with a large woodcut embossed on the front cover and William Caxton’s device embossed on the rear cover. Minimal wear to corners of rear cover, small split at bottom of rear joint. Otherwise a fine copy. With two armorial bookplates. DB 00614. $1,850 One of 100 Specially Bound Sets of “The Second World War” 21. CHURCHILL, [Sir] Winston S. The Second World War. London: [1948-1954]. First English edition. One of only 100 sets specially bound by the publisher for presentation. Six octavo volumes. Comprising: The Gathering Storm, Their Finest Hour, The Grand Alliance, The Hinge of Fate, An Important Nineteenth-Century Edition of “Don Quixote,” Extra-Illustrated with Approximately 200 Plates 19. CERVANTES SAAVEDRA, Miguel de. The History of the Ingenious Gentleman, Don Quixote of La Mancha; Translated from the Spanish, by Motteux. A New Edition, with Copious Notes; and an Essay on the Life and Writings of Cervantes [by J.G. Lockhart]. Edinburgh: 1822. Five octavo volumes. Extra-illustrated with over 200 plates (many handcolored) from different illustrated editions of Don Quixote, including Closing the Ring, and Triumph and Tragedy. Illustrated with maps (some folding, some with color), diagrams, and facsimiles (some folding). Loosely inserted is a printed leaf: “With all good wishes from Winston S. Churchill.” Publisher’s full black morocco lettered in gilt on spines. A fine set. DB 00606. $4,750 The Most Important Work Illustrated by Walter Crane— One of 1,000 Copies Printed on Handmade Paper illustrations by Chas. Heath after R. Westall (1820), B. Lane after C. Coypel (1808), G. VanderGucht after L. Vanderbank (1809), and others. Bound ca. 1920 for Brentano’s by Bayntun of Bath in full green morocco 22. [CRANE, Walter, illustrator]. SPENSER, [Edmund]. Spenser’s Faerie Queene. A Poem in Six Books, with the Fragment Mutabilitie. Edited by Thomas J. Wise…London: 1897. One of 1,000 copies printed ment leaf. Wood-engraved frontispiece and vignette title and eleven wood-engraved text illustrations. Bound by Rivière & Son in full black morocco gilt. Original red cloth covers and spine bound in. Spine faded to brown. Tiny stain in the lower blank corner of four leaves. Otherwise an exceptional copy of Charles Dickens’s rarest book. We have been able to locate only one other copy of this first issue at auction (in 2002, in the on handmade paper, out of a total edition of 1,028 copies. Six quarto volumes. Double-page general title in Volume I, seven individual titlepages (dated 1894-1896), eighty-eight full-page woodcut illustrations (one double-page), 132 head- and tail-pieces, numerous decorative initials, and printer’s and publisher’s colophons. Bound by Zaehnsdorf in full dark green morocco gilt. Covers decoratively tooled in gilt to match the original cover design. Zaehnsdorf exhibition stamp in gilt on rear doublure. Original pink printed wrappers bound in. A fine set. DB 00104. $5,000 “The Adventures of Four Nasty Children and Our Hero with Mr. Willy Wonka and His Famous Candy Plant” 23. DAHL, Roald. Charlie and the Chocolate Factory. Illustrated by Joseph Schindelman. New York: [1964]. First edition (preceding the English edition by three years). First issue, with six lines of printing information (instead of five) in the colophon. Octavo. Original red cloth with covers stamped in blind and spine stamped and lettered in gilt. A fine copy. In the original first issue color pictorial dust jacket, with no ISBN number on the rear panel and with the price $3.95 on the front flap. The jacket is very slightly darkened and has a few small creases, but overall, is in excellent condition. DB 00382. $6,500 Excessively Rare First Edition, First Issue, of Charles Dickens’s “Battle of Life” 24. DICKENS, Charles. The Battle of Life. A Love Story. London: 1846. First edition of the fourth of Dickens’s five Christmas books, first issue of the vignette title (Todd A, Eckel 1), with no scroll and with the subtitle in heavy type. Small octavo. Bound without the final advertise- original cloth, recased, and part a set of the Christmas Books) since the George Barr McCutcheon copy in 1926. Chemised in a full morocco slipcase. DB 00758. $40,000 The “Edition des Bibliophiles” of the Works of Charles Dickens—One of Twenty-Six Copies 25. DICKENS, Charles. Charles Dickens’s Works. Edited by Richard Garnett. Most Unusually and Elaborately Illustrated. London: Merrill & Baker, [1900]. Edition des Bibliophiles. Limited to twenty-six lettered copies. Thirty-two octavo volumes. Illustrated with frontispieces and plates, including photogravures, etchings, photo-etchings, from the original illustrations, and with fifty watercolor and wash drawings by “Kyd” (Joseph Clayton Clarke). Contemporary blue morocco with covers decoratively tooled in gilt in a floral design, spines decoratively tooled and lettered in gilt in compartments with five raised bands, turn-ins decoratively tooled in gilt, red calf doublures, red watered silk liners, top edge gilt, others uncut. Spines uniformly faded to green. A wonderful set. DB 00566. $35,000 First Edition of Charles Dickens’s Second Christmas Book 26. DICKENS, Charles. The Chimes: A Goblin Story of Some Bells that Rang an Old Year Out and a New Year In. London: 1845. First edition (first state of vignette title, with “Chapman & Hall” centered and slightly curved in the cloud at the foot of the engraved plate). Small octavo. Wood-engraved frontispiece and vignette title and eleven wood-engraved text illustrations. Early twentieth-century red scored calf gilt by Zaehnsdorf. All edges gilt. Original red cloth covers and spine bound in. A near fine copy. DB 00423. $500 First Edition, First Issue, of “A Christmas Carol” 27. DICKENS, Charles. A Christmas Carol. In Prose. Being a Ghost Story of Christmas. With Illustrations by John Leech. London: 1843. First edition, first issue, with the text entirely uncorrected, “Stave I” as the first chapter heading, red and blue title-page dated 1843, blue half-title, and green-coated endpapers. Small octavo. Four hand-colored steel-engraved plates and four wood-engraved text illustrations. Original cinnamon vertically-ribbed cloth decoratively stamped in gilt and blind and lettered in gilt. The binding matches Todd’s first impression, first issue. Very slightly skewed, the absolute bare minimum of rubbing to cloth at corners and spine extremities. Slight offsetting from the plates, some occasional very light soiling. Early ink signature beginning on the front pastedown and continuing on the verso of the front free endpaper, with a tiny bit of ink offsetting on the upper blank corner of the halftitle. A very pretty copy in near fine condition, totally unsophisticated, and certainly one of the best copies that we have ever seen. Housed in a morocco pull-off case. DB 00630. $42,500 ruled in blind and lettered in gilt and spine lettered in gilt. Minimal fading to spine, gilt on spine a little dull. Free endpapers slightly browned from pastedown glue. Otherwise a fine copy. Notable for containing three stories not narrated by Dr. Watson. DB 00516. $1,850 A Fine First Edition “Hound,” in the Original Cloth 29. DOYLE, A[rthur] Conan. The Hound of the Baskervilles. Another Adventure of Sherlock Holmes. London: 1902. First edition in book form (first serialized in the Strand Magazine between August 1901 and April 1902). Small octavo. Sixteen plates by Sidney Paget. Original scarlet cloth pictorially stamped in gilt and black and lettered in gilt. Spine slightly faded, minor blistering to cloth on covers near joints. Minimal foxing to edges, free endpapers slightly browned. An excellent copy, with the gilt bright and fresh. DB 00348. $6,500 “‘Holmes!’ I cried. ‘Is it really you? Can it indeed be that you are alive?’” 30. DOYLE, A[rthur] Conan. The Return of Sherlock Holmes. Illustrated by Sidney Paget. London: 1905. First English edition of the third collection of Sherlock Holmes stories (preceded by the first American edition The Final Collection of Sherlock Holmes Stories by Arthur Conan Doyle, in the Original Cloth 28. DOYLE, Arthur Conan. The Case-Book of Sherlock Holmes. London: [1927]. First edition of the final collection of Sherlock Holmes stories by Arthur Conan Doyle. Small octavo. Original red cloth with front cover by about one month). Small octavo. Sixteen plates. Original dark blue cloth lettered in gilt on front cover and spine. Small area of discoloration on rear cover. Some light foxing. A few leaves with short tears in the gutter at the top or the bottom. Overall, an excellent copy, with the gilt much brighter than is usually seen. “The author was persuaded to revive Sherlock Holmes by the generous offers made by the proprietors of the American magazine…thirteen stories were written, among them some of the most interesting in the whole series” (Green and Gibson, pp. 140-141). DB 00512. $3,750 The Third Collection of Sherlock Holmes Stories 31. DOYLE, A[rthur] Conan. The Return of Sherlock Holmes. Illustrated by Sidney Paget. London: 1905. First English edition of the third collection of Sherlock Holmes stories (preceded by the first American edition by about one month). Small octavo. Sixteen plates. Bound by BayntunRivière in full royal blue morocco gilt. Original blue cloth front cover bound in at end. Tiny marginal repair to final leaf of text. Otherwise a fine copy. DB 00107. $1,750 boards. Front covers and spines pictorially stamped and lettered in gilt and black. Minimal rubbing to corners and spine extremities. Minimal foxing. This is a remarkable set—one of the best that we have ever seen—with the gilt on the spines fresh and bright and the hinges untouched. Each volume chemised in a quarter morocco slipcase. The Adventures of Sherlock Holmes contains the first twelve of the fifty-six Sherlock Holmes stories and The Memoirs of Sherlock Holmes contains the following twelve stories. The final story, “The Final Problem,” describes Sherlock Holmes’s death at Reichenbach Falls in Switzerland. DB 00058. $28,500 A Spectacular Original Watercolor Drawing by Edmund Dulac Depicting Cinderella on Her Way to the Ball Extremely Scarce First Impression of the First Sherlock Holmes Story 32. DOYLE, A[rthur] Conan. A Study in Scarlet. London: Ward, Lock & Co., 1888. First edition in book form, first impression, of the first Sherlock Holmes story (preceded only by the story’s appearance in Beeton’s Christmas Annual 1887) and the author’s first published work. Octavo. Six full-page illustrations by the author’s father, Charles Doyle. Bound ca. 1940 by Zaehnsdorf in full red morocco gilt. Tiny sliver torn from upper blank corner of preliminary advertisement leaf. An exceptional, tall copy, remarkably surviving with all of the publisher’s advertisements, although bound without the original printed wrappers. Chemised in a morocco slipcase. DB 00628. $85,000 A Spectacular First Edition Set of the “Adventures” and “Memoirs” of Sherlock Holmes 33. DOYLE, A[rthur] Conan. The Adventures of Sherlock Holmes. [Together with:] The Memoirs of Sherlock Holmes. Illustrations by Sidney Paget. London: 1892-1894. First editions (first issue of The Adventures of Sherlock Holmes). Two large octavo volumes. The Adventures of Sherlock Holmes with 104 illustrations in the text, and The Memoirs of Sherlock Holmes with ninety illustrations in the text (including the frontispiece, “The Death of Sherlock Holmes”). Original light blue and dark blue cloth, respectively, over bevelled 34. DULAC, Edmund. “She was driven away, beside herself with joy.” Original pen-and-ink and watercolor drawing for the color plate facing p. 54, illustrating “Cinderella or The Little Glass Slipper,” in The Sleeping Beauty and Other Fairy Tales from the Old French Retold by Sir Arthur Quiller-Couch (London: [1910]). This spectacular watercolor drawing depicts a wooded scene with a full moon in the background and Cinderella being driven to the ball in “a beautiful coach all covered with gold,” drawn by horses “of a lovely grey, dappled with mouse colour” and accompanied by a coachman and three footmen in “their bedizened liveries.” Signed and dated at lower right. Image size: 12 1/2 x 10 1/4 inches (318 x 260 mm.). Matted, framed, and glazed. “In his painting, Edmund Dulac was ever the experimenter, ever the innovator…From his first to his last picture, Dulac displayed sensational colours … His special shade of blue was called, with double entendre, bleu du lac. Not only his blue, but his very French talent for unusual combinations of colors, produced stunning effects” (Hughey, Introduction). DB 00608. $65,000 In the Original Publisher’s Box 35. [DULAC, Edmund, illustrator]. ANDERSEN, Hans [Christian]. Stories from Hans Andersen. London: [1911]. First trade edition. Large quarto. Mounted color frontispiece and twenty-seven mounted color One of 750 Copies Signed by Edmund Dulac 37. [DULAC, Edmund, illustrator]. OMAR KHAYYÁM. Rubáiyát of Omar Khayyám. Rendered into English Verse by Edward Fitzgerald. London: [n.d., 1909]. Limited to 750 copies, numbered and signed by the artist. Large quarto. Twenty mounted color plates. Original vellum over boards pictorially stamped and lettered in gilt. Original brown silk ties. A fine copy. Housed in the original publisher’s white cardboard slipcase. DB 00587. $2,500 One of 750 Copies Signed by Edmund Dulac 38. [DULAC, Edmund, illustrator]. POE, Edgar Allan. The Bells and Other Poems. London: [n.d., 1912]. Edition de Luxe. Limited to 750 copies, numbered and signed by the artist. Large quarto. Twenty-eight mounted color plates. Ten black ink head-pieces on tan backgrounds and portrait of Poe on the title-page, also in black ink on tan background. Original vellum over boards pictorially stamped and lettered in gilt. Later silk ties. An excellent copy. Loosely laid in is the Leicester Gal- plates. Original pale olive green cloth pictorially stamped and lettered in gilt. Minor foxing to edges, endpapers, and first and last few leaves. Otherwise a fine copy. In the original publisher’s green cardboard box stamped in dark green with the design from the front cover of the book (some foxing and slight wear to box). DB 00517. $1,850 One of 500 Copies Signed by Edmund Dulac 36. [DULAC, Edmund, illustrator]. HAWTHORNE, Nathaniel. Tanglewood Tales. London: [n.d., 1918]. Edition de Luxe. Limited to 500 copies, numbered and signed by the artist. Large quarto. Fourteen mounted color plates. Original wartime binding of half vellum over gray paper boards. Spine pictorially stamped and lettered in gilt. Some rubbing to board edges. Light foxing to first and last few leaves. Previous owner’s ink presentation inscription on half-title. Overall, an excellent copy. “In December 1916 Dulac drew the first of the illustrations for what was to be his last Gift Book for Hodder and Stoughton, Hawthorne’s Tanglewood Tales…Because of paper restrictions the book was not published until 1918” (Colin White, Edmund Dulac, p. 88). DB 00112. $1,100 leries announcement for the exhibition of Dulac’s original drawings for The Bells. The exhibition ran from November 23 until Christmas 1912. Housed in a cloth slipcase. DB 00108. $2,500 One of 100 Copies Signed by Edmund Dulac 39. [DULAC, Edmund, illustrator]. ROSENTHAL, Léonard. The Kingdom of the Pearl. London: [n.d., 1920]. English deluxe limited edition (first published in French in 1919 without Dulac illustrations and again in 1920 with Dulac illustrations as Au Royaume de la Perle). One of 100 copies numbered and signed by the artist, out of a total edition of 775 copies “for sale in the British Empire” (an additional 775 copies were published by Brentano’s, New York, in 1925 “for sale in the United States of America”). Large quarto. Ten mounted color plates. Original quarter vellum over white paper boards decoratively stamped and lettered in gilt. Some light spotting to the paper boards, corners slightly bumped. Internally a fine and fresh copy. DB 00111. $1,750 A Beautifully Bound Copy of the Rarest Dulac Signed Limited Edition—One of Only Fifty Copies 40. [DULAC, Edmund, illustrator]. STEVENSON, Robert Louis. Treasure Island. London: 1927. Edition de Luxe. Limited to fifty numbered copies on handmade paper, signed by the artist. Quarto. Twelve color plates and twenty-one black and white drawings in the text. Bound by Zaehnsdorf in full dark green morocco pictorially stamped and lettered in gilt. A beautifully bound copy in fine condition. “For Treasure Island Dulac experimented with a new style. He eschewed all the strong colours that had been so attractive a feature of the earlier books, and painted the illustrations in closely related tones to give a pastel-like, dreamy softness. He conceived each of the drawings as a distance shot from above, making the characters look tiny against the vastness of the surrounding scene. The effect was strange, like an optical illusion, and very successful. Many years later Dulac admitted that the illustrations which most pleased him were those for Treasure Island” (Colin White, Edmund Dulac, p. 135). DB 00744. $9,500 In a Fine Modern Binding by Robert Porter 41. [EGAN, Beresford, illustrator]. BAUDELAIRE, [Charles]. Fleurs du Mal in Pattern and Prose by Beresford Egan and C. Bower Alcock. London: [1929]. Limited to 500 numbered copies, signed by the illustrator. Large quarto. Color frontispiece, two vignettes in black and green, and multicolor morocco. Two plates cut and mounted. An excellent example. Housed in a felt-lined cloth slipcase. An imitation of Pierce Egan’s Life in London; or, The Day and Night Scenes of Jerry Hawthorn, Esq. and His Elegant Friend Corinthian Tom, Accompanied by Bob Logic, The Oxonian, in their Rambles and Sprees through the Metropolis (London: 1821). DB 00114. $2,500 First Edition, First Printing, First State, First Binding of “The Mill on the Floss,” in the Original Cloth 43. ELIOT, George. The Mill on the Floss. Edinburgh: 1860. First edition, first printing, presumed first state. Three octavo volumes. Without the inserted leaf advertising Scenes of Clerical Life and Adam Bede and its conjugate blank in the preliminaries of Volume I, but with 16 pp. publisher’s advertisements at the end of Volume III. Original orange-brown diagonal ripple-grain cloth (Carter’s variant A) with covers decoratively stamped in blind and spines decoratively stamped and lettered in gilt. fifteen full-page drawings in black and white. In a fine modern binding by Robert Porter of full dark green morocco gilt. Front cover with a stylized floral and leaf design with multicolor morocco onlays. Back cover tooled in blind in the same design with black and gray morocco onlays. Spine lettered in blind and decoratively tooled in gilt with multicolor morocco floral onlays. Minimal foxing and marginal soiling. A near fine copy. Laid in is an Autograph Note Signed from R.L. Porter, dated February 1990, describing the binding. DB 00730. $2,500 “Real Life in London” in an Onlaid Morocco Binding 42. [EGAN, Pierce, imitation of ]. Real Life in London; or, The Rambles and Adventures of Bob Tallyho, Esq. and His Cousin, the Hon. Tom Dashall, through the Metropolis; Exhibiting a Living Picture of Fashionable Characters, Manners, and Amusements in High and Low Life…Embellished and Illustrated with a Series of Coloured Prints, Designed and Engraved Light wear to extremities, circulating library labels neatly removed from front covers, short split to rear joint of Volume I neatly repaired, inner hinges of Volumes I and III expertly and almost invisibly repaired. Some occasional foxing or staining. A very good copy. DB 00560. $4,500 The Essex House Press “Poems of William Shakespeare” 44. [ESSEX HOUSE PRESS]. SHAKESPEARE, William. The Poems of William Shakespeare, According to the Text of the Original Copies, Including the Lyrics, Songs, and Snatches Found in His Dramas. [Lon- by Messrs. Alken, Dighton, Brooke, Rowlandson, &c. London: 1821. First edition, first issue. Volume I (of two) only. Octavo. Hand-colored engraved vignette title and eighteen hand-colored engraved plates. Early to mid twentieth-century full red morocco gilt by Bayntun of Bath. Front cover with an onlaid figure of a London “character” executed in don: 1899]. Limited to 450 numbered copies. Small quarto. Woodcut frontispiece by Reginald Savage, decorative woodcut initials, woodcut printer’s device. “Arranged, and carefully collated with the originals, by F.S. Ellis, and printed at the Essex House Press, under the care of C.R. Asbee” (Colophon). Bound in early twentieth-century green morocco gilt. Covers with a panel of inlaid black morocco. Spine very slightly faded. An excellent copy, largely unopened. DB 00712. $2,000 An Extra-Illustrated Copy of the 1791 Edition of “Tom Jones,” with Twelve Etchings by Thomas Rowlandson 45. FIELDING, Henry. History of Tom Jones, a Foundling. Edinburgh: 1791. Three octavo volumes. Twelve etched plates by Thomas Rowlandson. Extra-illustrated with forty-two additional plates. Early twentieth- Copy Number “One” of Twelve Copies Printed on Vellum 47. [FLINT, W. Russell, illustrator]. KINGSLEY, Charles. The Heroes or Greek Fairy Tales for My Children. London: Philip Lee Warner, Publisher to the Medici Society Ltd., 1912. One of twelve numbered copies printed on vellum (this copy being No. “One”), out of a total edition of 512 copies. Quarto. Twelve mounted color plates. With an extra suite of the twelve plates chemised in a cloth folder. Title printed in blue and black with the lettering engraved after the design of M. Engall. Original full limp vellum lettered in gilt. Original green silk ties. Bookplate neatly removed from front pastedown. Small bookseller’s label and small library ticket on front pastedown. Ink library stamps at foot of title, on verso of title, and at foot of verso of mount of final plate. Otherwise this is a very fine copy. Housed together with the extra suite of plates in a quarter morocco clamshell. DB 00362. $6,500 With a Fore-Edge Painting by Martin Frost 48. [FORE-EDGE PAINTING]. [BIBLE IN ENGLISH]. The Holy Bible, Containing the Old and New Testaments…Oxford: Printed at the University Press, 1854. Large octavo. Text in double columns. Contemporary full dark green morocco gilt over bevelled boards by Hayday. All edges gilt. century tan polished calf gilt by Zaehnsdorf. All edges gilt. A beautiful set. “Rowlandson’s free and easy way of life and robust nature made him a congenial illustrator of the English novelists of the age. The Vicar of Wakefield was once cited as his best book in this line…but Tom Jones is a far more typical effort” (Ray, The Illustrator and the Book in England, 32). DB 00578. $1,500 W. Russell Flint’s “Song of Songs” 46. [FLINT, W. Russell, illustrator]. The Song of Songs Which is Solomon’s. London: Philip Lee Warner, Publisher to the Medici Society Ltd., 1909. One of 500 numbered copies on hand-made Riccardi paper, out of a total of 517 copies. Quarto. Ten mounted color plates. Original holland-backed boards with printed paper labels on front cover and spine. Additional printed paper labels tipped in. Light offsetting from cellotape on free endpapers. Otherwise a fine copy. In the original gray printed dust jacket (jacket very slightly chipped at top and bottom of spine). The first book printed at the Riccardi Press. DB 00454. $550 10 With a fore-edge painting by Martin Frost of a Mississippi steamboat after Currier & Ives. Tipped in at the back of the book is Martin Frost’s printed certificate, inscribed: “Holy Bible/1854/[decorative rule]/‘Wooding Up’ at night/on the Mississip[p]i/(after Currier & Ives)/[decorative rule]/Martin Frost/MCMXCVI.” DB 00583. $2,000 Gavarni’s “Terrible Children” 49. GAVARNI [pseudonym of Guillaume Sulpice Chevallier]. Les Enfans terribles. Paris: [n.d., 1838-1842]. Large quarto. Forty-nine handcolored lithographed plates, heightened with gum arabic. Bound without the hand-colored lithographed title. Contemporary navy blue cloth lettered in gilt. Some rubbing to cloth, small strip of cloth neatly reattached at upper edge of rear board, front hinge expertly repaired. Some foxing, a few plates slightly browned, small dampstain to the upper blank corner of Plate 1 and to the lower blank margin of advertisements at end. A very good copy. “In its images, Gavarni regularly uses the quasi-innocent questions or remarks of children to put the world of the adults around them in disarray” (Beatrice Farwell, The Charged Image, p. 91). DB 00322. $2,500 scribing the binding: “Total design is abstract but there is a suggestion of sea-blue & green with the bright inlays suggesting the light & exotic colours of the South. The shapes, formalized, of the inlays are also in some etchings—fins, hats & fruit.” DB 00728. $2,500 Captain Bligh’s “Voyage in the Resource” 52. [GOLDEN COCKEREL PRESS]. BLIGH, William. Bligh’s Voyage in the Resource from Coupang to Batavia, Together with the Log of His Subsequent Passage to England in the Dutch Packet Vlydt and His Remarks on Morrison’s Journal. [All Printed for the First Time from the Manuscript in the Mitchell Library of New South Wales, with an Introduction and Notes by Owen Rutter, & Engravings on Wood by Peter Barker-Mill]. [London]: 1937. Limited to 350 copies. Folio. Original blue and beige cloth binding. Spine stamped and lettered in gilt. Small red ink stamp on front free endpaper. A near fine copy. DB 00622. $1,350 “The First of the Cockerel ‘Sea Log’ Series” One of the Great Nineteenth-Century Color-Plate Books, with Twenty-Four Hand-Colored Aquatints 50. GERNING, J.J. [Johann Isaac] von. A Picturesque Tour Along the Rhine, from Mentz to Cologne: With Illustrations of the Scenes of Remarkable Events, and of Popular Traditions…Translated from the German by John Black. London: 1820. First English edition, early issue (the original unillustrated German edition was published in Wiesbaden in 1819 as Die Rheingegenden von Mainz bis Cölln). Large quarto. Complete with the list of subscribers. Large folding engraved map with color highlights and twenty-four hand-colored aquatint plates by D. Havell and T. Sutherland after C.G. Schutz. Text watermarked 1817 and 1818, plates watermarked 1819 and 1820. Contemporary dark green roan ruled in gilt and blind. Spine lettered in gilt. All edges gilt. Binding lightly rubbed at extremities, with a tiny split to rear joint at head of spine. Some minor foxing and offsetting. A few small marginal rust spots. A fine, tall copy in a contemporary binding. DB 00529. $8,500 In a Fine Modern Binding by Robert Porter 51. GIBBINGS, Robert. Fourteen Wood Engravings. From Drawings Made on Orient Line Cruises. [Waltham St. Lawrence: Printed by Robert Gibbings at the Golden Cockerel Press, 1932]. First edition. Large folio. Woodcut vignette on title, small woodcut on following text page, and fourteen full-page woodcuts. In a fine modern binding by Robert Porter of full blue morocco. Front cover with five different colored morocco inlays as segments of a semi-circle delineated with a gilt dotted rule. Back cover with a similar design of a semi-circle delineated with dotted lines in gilt and blind with different colored onlaid morocco dots. Green morocco spine lettered in blind and decoratively tooled in gilt. Binding with a few small areas of slight discoloration. Short tear to outer blank margin of title, tiny tear to lower blank margin of final leaf. Otherwise a fine copy. Laid in is an Autograph Note Signed by Robert Porter de- 53. [GOLDEN COCKEREL PRESS]. BLIGH, William. The Voyage of the Bounty’s Launch as Related in William Bligh’s Despatch to the Admiralty and the Journal of John Fryer. With an Introduction by Owen Rutter and Wood-Engravings by Robert Gibbings. [London]: 1934. Limited to 300 copies. Folio. Original cream and rust cloth binding. Spine stamped and lettered in gilt. Small red ink stamp on front free endpaper. A near fine copy. “The first of the Cockerel ‘Sea Log’ series. An innovation was the ‘sail-type’ of binding. Previously two different cloths had never been combined to form a pattern” (Chanticleer 95). DB 00621. $950 Matthew Flinders’s “Narrative of an Expedition to Furneaux Islands” 54. [GOLDEN COCKEREL PRESS]. FLINDERS, Matthew. Matthew Flinders’ Narrative of His Voyage in the Schooner Francis: 1798. Preceded and Followed by Notes…by Geoffrey Rawson. With Engravings by John Buckland Wright. [London]: 1946. Limited to 750 copies. Folio. Publisher’s full green buckram with front cover pictorially stamped in gilt after a design by John Buckland Wright. Spine stamped and lettered in gilt. Small red ink stamp on front free endpaper. A near fine copy. “This is another book of daring exploration in our ‘Sea Series’. I tried to produce these stories of high adventure in an exciting way, and planned to make the book a symphony in green. I even thought of Scenting the paper with seaweed” (Cockalorum 170). DB 00620. $800 The First Edition of “The Wind in the Willows” with Color Plates by Ernest H. Shepard 55. GRAHAME, Kenneth. The Wind in the Willows. London: [1959]. First edition with color plates by Ernest H. Shepard. Octavo. Eight color plates. Black and white text illustrations. Modern three-quarter green calf over marbled boards. Spine decoratively tooled in gilt in compartments with red morocco gilt lettering label. First published in 1908 with a frontispiece by Graham Robertson. The first edition illustrated by Ernest H. Shepard was published in 1931 (with the illustrations in black and white). DB 00582. $600 A Complete Set of the Kate Greenaway “Almanacks,” including a Presentation Copy 56. GREENAWAY, Kate. Almanack for 1883-[1895]. [Together with:] Kate Greenaway’s Almanack & Diary for 1897. London: [1882-1894] and [1896]. A complete set of first edition Kate Greenaway Almanacks, including a presentation copy of Kate Greenaway’s Almanack & Diary for 1897, inscribed by the illustrator on the half-title: “Eileen Ponsonby/From/Kate Greenaway/1896.” Together fifteen twentyfourmo and twelvemo volumes, including a duplicate of the Almanack for 1884. No Almanack for 1896 was published. Numerous wood-engraved text illustrations printed in color by Edmund Evans. Original bindings of glazed pictorial boards with cloth spines, glazed pictorial wrappers, imitation morocco boards, cloth, and imitation morocco. The Almanack for 1892 is in the original 11 Rodney Engen’s biography of Kate Greenaway (see pp. 93-94) and in Susan Ruth Thomson’s Catalogue of the Kate Greenaway Collection, Rare Book Room, Detroit Public Library (see pp. 15 and 176)). This portrait was inscribed four years earlier, in 1879, and although we have been unable to identify the recipient, we believe it to be a childhood friend of Greenaway’s. DB 00756. $12,500 Edition de Luxe, with an Original Pencil Sketch by Kate Greenaway printed mailing wrapper and the Almanack for 1895 is in the original glassine. Overall, an excellent set of these charming little books. Housed together in a full morocco clamshell case. DB 00123. $6,500 Original Inscribed Kate Greenaway Self Portrait 57. GREENAWAY, Kate. Original watercolor self portrait. [N.p.: n.d., 1879]. The portrait, a side view of Greenaway wearing a black hat with a brown band and feathers or pompoms, a blouse with a ruffled collar, and a beige cape, is inscribed by Greenaway: “To Alma [or Anna?] Coote/Faithfully yours/with my very dearest love/K.G./1879.” Image 58. [GREENAWAY, Kate]. SPIELMANN, M.H., and G.S. Layard. Kate Greenaway. London: 1905. Edition de Luxe. Limited to 500 numbered copies (this copy being No. 181), signed by the artist’s brother, John Greenaway. Large quarto. Color frontispiece and fifty-three color plates. Numerous black and white illustrations, including thirty-four half-tone plates. Original white cloth over bevelled boards decoratively stamped in blind and lettered in gilt. A near fine copy. All 500 copies of the Edition de Luxe have original Kate Greenaway artwork bound in. This copy has an exceptional original pencil sketch by Kate Greenaway depicting a young girl, standing facing left, wearing a long dress with an empire waist, big puffy sleeves, and a wide sash with a bow at the back. At upper right, are detailed sketches of her arms, wearing long fingerless gloves, resting on a surface. DB 00598. $2,750 The First Volume of “the Most Splendid of English Costume Books” 59. [HEIDELOFF, Nikolaus Wilhelm von, publisher]. Gallery of Fashion. Vol. I, April 1794-March 1795. [London]: 1794-1795. First edition. Quarto. Hand-colored engraved title and twenty-four hand-colored size: 6 3/8 x 4 inches (161 x 112 mm.). Set under bevelled glass within a gold frame in a green morocco clamshell case lined with red velvet by Sangorski & Sutcliffe. Covers decoratively panelled in gilt with red morocco gilt floral onlays, front cover lettered in gilt, spine decoratively panelled with red morocco gilt floral onlays and lettered in gilt in compartments. A wonderful example. This portrait is similar to the inscribed self portrait that Greenaway sent to John Ruskin in 1883 (illustrated in 12 engraved plates depicting forty-six figures of fashionably dressed ladies. Each plate with descriptive text. Contemporary limp red roan gilt. Early ink signature on verso of front free endpaper. Some rubbing to covers. Otherwise a fine copy. “The most splendid of English costume books, and the first real venture in this country of a periodical devoted to the changing taste in dress” (Abbey, Life, 218). Only 167 copies were subscribed to for this first volume in 1794, including “the Princess Royal, the Princess Augusta, the Princess Elizabeth, the Duke of York and the Empress of Germany” (Holland, Hand Coloured Fashion Plates 1770 to 1899, p. 48). DB 00547. $7,500 A Near Fine Copy in the Original Dust Jacket 60. HEMINGWAY, Ernest. A Farewell to Arms. New York: 1929. First trade edition, first issue, with publisher’s seal on copyright page and no A Superb First Edition Set of “Jungle Books” 63. KIPLING, Rudyard. The Jungle Book. With Illustrations by J.L. Kipling, W.H. Drake, and P. Frenzeny. [Together with:] The Second Jungle Book. With Illustrations by J. Lockwood Kipling. London: 1894-1895. First editions. Two small octavo volumes. Each volume in the original bright blue cloth pictorially stamped and lettered in gilt. The absolute legal disclaimer on p. [x]. Octavo. Original black cloth with gold paper labels ruled and lettered in black on front cover and spine. Extremities very slightly bumped, tiny portion of lower corner of spine label chipped away. Small bookseller’s ticket on front free endpaper. Otherwise a near fine copy. In the original first issue color pictorial dust jacket (with the name of the heroine, Catherine Barkley, misspelled “Katharine Barclay” on the front flap). The jacket has a few tiny chips and edge tears, but is not faded and is totally untouched. DB 00755. $11,500 First Edition of Kafka’s “Metamorphosis” in the Deluxe Binding 61. KAFKA, Franz. Die Verwandlung [The Metamorphosis]. Leipzig: [1915]. First edition, deluxe boards issue. Octavo. Original blue gray boards with cream-colored parchment spine. Front cover and spine lettered in black. One tiny chip on rear joint, bottom of spine expertly and almost invisibly repaired, top edge of boards slightly sunned. Otherwise an exceptionally fine and crisp copy. Housed in a quarter morocco clamshell case. According to the publisher, 1,000 copies were printed, most of them issued in wrappers. DB 00612. $6,500 minimum of rubbing to corners and spine extremities. Some light foxing in The Second Jungle Book. Small bookseller’s description tipped to front free endpaper of The Jungle Book. A superb set, exceptionally clean and bright. DB 00371. $7,500 The True First Issue of Kipling’s “Just So Stories,” in the Extremely Scarce Original Printed Dust Jacket 64. KIPLING, Rudyard. Just So Stories for Little Children. Illustrated by the Author. London: 1902. First edition, first issue (with white pig- A Fine Inlaid Morocco Binding by Kelly & Sons 62. [KELLY & SONS, binders]. CARROLL, Lewis. The Hunting of the Snark…With Nine Illustrations by Henry Holiday. London: 1876. First edition. Small octavo. Bound without the final leaf (blank on the recto and with advertisements on the verso). Nine full-page wood-engraved illustrations. Bound by Kelly & Sons in full green morocco gilt. Front cover with an inlaid vignette of the “Baker” executed in multicolored morocco. Original buff cloth covers and spine bound in. A wonderful example in fine condition. “The poem describes with infinite humor the impossible voyage of an improbable crew to find an inconceivable creature. It has been called the ‘Odyssey of the Nonsensical’” (Williams, Madan and Green 115). DB 00401. $3,500 13 ment) of Kipling’s famous collection of twelve stories and twelve poems, including “How the Camel Got His Hump” and “How the Leopard Got His Spots.” Small quarto. Twenty-two full-page illustrations. Original red cloth pictorially stamped in black and white on covers, lettered in white on front cover, and pictorially stamped and lettered in white on spine. White pigment flaking a little, mainly on the spine, but far less than usual. A near fine copy—one of the best that we have ever seen—in the extremely scarce original tan dust jacket printed in red (jacket spine missing). Chemised in a quarter morocco slipcase. “The white pigment used on the covers of the first edition flaked off and a new ink was used for subsequent issues” (Stewart 260). DB 00416. $12,500 in the outer margin of three leaves. Small paper flaw to the outer edge of one leaf. Otherwise a fine copy. Housed in a marbled board slipcase. DB 00498. $4,500 Twenty-Six Original Watercolor Drawings Illustrating Kipling’s Works 65. [KIPLING, Rudyard]. S[MYTH], D[orothy] [Carleton]. Twentysix original pen-and-ink and watercolor drawings illustrating titles of A Complete First Edition Set of Andrew Lang’s “Fairy Books” Kipling’s works, possibly done as designs for “vellucent” bindings for a set of Kipling’s works. [N.p.: n.d., ca. 1920]. Twenty-six leaves (measuring approximately 9 11/16 x 6 9/16 inches; 246 x 167 mm.), each with a central inlaid rectangular watercolor vignette within a decorative floral border, with the title in red and lines from the text in black below, beginning with an illuminated initial, all underlined in red. Twelve of the watercolors are signed D.C.S. (Dorothy Carleton Smyth, 1880-1933). A wonderful set, from the archives of the Bayntun-Rivière bindery. Housed in a cloth clamshell case. “In his large bindery at Portway, Bath, [Cedric] Chivers employed about forty women for folding, sewing, mending, and collating work, and in addition, five more women worked in a separate department, to design, illuminate, and colour vellum for book decoration, and to work on embossed leather…but the woman most frequently employed for this kind of work was probably Dorothy Carl[e]ton Smyth” (Marianne Tidcombe, Women Bookbinders 1880-1920, p. 86). DB 00648. $8,500 La Fontaine’s “Cupid and Psyche,” with Four Color-Printed Engraved Plates 66. LA FONTAINE, J[ean] de. Les Amours de Psyché et de Cupidon…Paris: 1791. Large quarto. Four color-printed stipple-engraved plates by Madame de Mouchy, C. Bonnefoy, and N. Colibert, after M. Schall. The plates are in the first state, “before titles.” Bound by De Samblanx & J. Weckesser in full red scored calf. Covers decoratively panelled in gilt, spine decoratively tooled and lettered in gilt in compartments, all edges gilt. Tiny holes, neatly filled in at the time of binding, 14 67. [LANG, Andrew, editor]. The Blue Fairy Book. [Together with:] The Red Fairy Book. [And:] The Green Fairy Book. [And:] The Yellow Fairy Book. [And:] The Pink Fairy Book. [And:] The Grey Fairy Book. [And:] The Violet Fairy Book. [And:] The Crimson Fairy Book. [And:] The Brown Fairy Book. [And:] The Orange Fairy Book. [And:] The Olive Fairy Book. [And:] The Lilac Fairy Book. London: 1889-1910. First editions. Twelve small octavo volumes. With illustrations by H.J. Ford, J.P. Jacomb Hood, and Lancelot Speed, including color plates. Bound by Sangorski & Sutcliffe in three-quarter harlequin morocco gilt over cloth boards. A very fine and attractive set. “A series of anthologies of fairy stories, beginning with The Blue Fairy Book, which were compiled for children by Andrew Lang between 1889 and 1910. They put both well known and obscure tales (some of them recently collected and never before printed) into a form that was accessible and attractive…For each of the books Lang himself selected the tales, commissioned necessary translations or adaptations, and wrote a preface” (The Oxford Companion to Children’s Literature). DB 00141. $9,500 First Edition of the First of Andrew Lang’s “Fairy Books,” in the Original Cloth 68. LANG, Andrew. The Blue Fairy Book… With Numerous Illustrations by H.J. Ford and G.P. Jacomb Hood. London: 1889. First edition. Octavo. Eight full-page wood engravings and numerous wood-engraved illustrations in the text. Original dark blue cloth pictorially stamped and lettered in gilt. Very faint early ink inscription on front free endpaper. Apart from the bare minimum of very slight foxing to a few leaves, this is an exceptional copy, with the gilt bright and fresh, of the first and scarcest title in this series. The Blue Fairy Book contains almost all of the “classic” fairy tales, including “Little Red Riding Hood,” “Cinderella,” “Aladdin,” “Rumpelstiltskin,” “Beauty and the Beast,” “Goldilocks,” “Dick Whittington,” “Hansel and Gretel,” “Snow White,” “Bluebeard,” and “Jack the Giant Killer.” DB 00060. $9,500 The Earliest Obtainable “King Arthur” in the Original Boards Aristide Maillol’s Illustrations to Virgil’s “Georgics” 69. [MAILLOL, Aristide, illustrator]. VIRGIL. Les Géorgiques…Paris: 1937-1943 [i.e. 1950]. Limited to 750 numbered copies. Two folio volumes. Text in Latin and French. With 122 woodcut illustrations. This copy with an additional volume containing two extra suites of the woodcuts, one in sanguine and one in black. Bound by Sangorski & Sutcliffe in full niger morocco gilt. Original printed wrappers bound in. The absolute bare minimum of faint foxing. Volume II with a tiny tear in the outer blank margin of the preliminary blank leaf and a tiny paper flaw in the upper blank margin of one leaf. Otherwise an absolutely fine copy. Original publisher’s prospectus bound in. Each volume housed in a cloth slipcase with morocco tips. “The last block was delivered to the publisher in September, 1944, shortly before the artist’s death. Most of the cuts were executed by craftsmen after Maillol’s drawings on the block, since at that time his eyes were not strong enough for the cutting” (The Artist & the Book, pp. 121-122). DB 00656. $9,500 71. MALORY, Sir Thomas. The History of the Renowned Prince Arthur, King of Britain; with His Life and Death, and All His Glorious Battles. Likewise, the Noble Acts and Heroic Deeds of His Valiant Knights of the Round Table…London: Printed for Walker and Edwards…, 1816. Seventh edition, preceded only by the editions of 1485, 1498, 1529, 1557, 1578, and 1634, all but the last virtually unobtainable. Two twentyfourmo volumes. Each volume with engraved frontispiece and added engraved title. Publisher’s tan printed paper over boards, uncut and largely unopened. Hinges cracked, but firm, front joint of Volume I neatly strengthened at an early date, spines a little worn but not darkened, light wear to corners. Otherwise this is a wonderful copy in a remarkably preserved fragile binding. Copies of this edition in the original printed boards are truly rare. Armorial bookplate on front pastedown and early ink inscription on half-title of each volume. Housed together in a quarter calf clamshell case. “These unassuming little volumes were the first publication of the works of Sir Thomas Malory in the nineteenth century, and their importance cannot be overestimated…[The three-volume edition edited by Joseph Haslewood and published by R. Wilks] was the second to appear in 1816” (Gaines, pp. 13-16). DB 00616. $4,500 A Fine First Edition Set of Presentation Copies of the Four “Pooh” Books Eight Hand-Colored Aquatints of the Capitals of Europe 72. MILNE, A[lan] A[lexander]. When We Were Very Young. [Together with:] Winnie-the-Pooh. [And:] Now We Are Six. [And:] The House at Pooh with glazed paper of various colors. The front boards elaborately embossed in blind with the name of each city in black in a medallion in the center. Minimal rubbing to extremities, a few spines slightly chipped. Some light foxing. An excellent copy of this charming and fragile set of pocket guides to European capitals. Booklabel on front pastedown and ink signature on front free endpaper of each volume except Paris. Housed together in the original cardboard slipcase covered with patterned paper (slipcase neatly repaired). DB 00709. $2,500 Corner. With Decorations by Ernest H. Shepard. London: [1924-1928]. First editions. Presentation copies, each volume inscribed by the author. When We Were Very Young inscribed on the front free endpaper: “This is Edna Dickstein’s book./A:A:Milne/[flourish]/Sep: 6th, 1927. And that’s her birthday./[flourishes].” Winnie-the-Pooh inscribed on the recto of the preliminary blank leaf: “For Mabel/with love from/A:A: Milne.” Now We Are Six inscribed on the half-title: “This book belongs 70. MALO, Charles. Les Capitales de l’Europe. Promenades Pittoresques. [Paris, Londres, St-Pétersbourg, Vienne, Rome, Berlin, Madrid, Constantinople]. Paris: [n.d., 1829]. Eight twelvemo volumes. Hand-colored aquatint view in each volume. Bound in the original thin boards covered 15 to/Charles Wilson/[flourish]/A:A:Milne/[flourish].” The House at Pooh Corner inscribed on the half-title: “Charles Wilson’s book/[flourish]/A: A:Milne/[flourish].” Four small octavo volumes. Text illustrations. Original royal blue, dark green, dark red, and salmon cloth, respectively, pictorially stamped and lettered in gilt. Each volume with the pencilled signature of M.S. Slocum, Pasadena. A fine set. In the original pictorial dust jackets. Housed together in a morocco book-back pull-off case by Sangorski & Sutcliffe. DB 00762. $45,000 The Fiftieth Anniversary Edition of the Four “Pooh” Books 73. MILNE, A.A. When We Were Very Young. [Together with:] Winnie-the-Pooh. [And:] Now We Are Six. [And:] The House at Pooh Corner. With Decorations by E.H. Shepard. London: [1974-1978]. Each volume limited to 300 numbered copies, signed by Christopher Milne. Four small octavo volumes. Text illustrations. Publisher’s light blue, red, maroon, and salmon morocco, respectively, pictorially stamped and lettered in gilt. A fine set. Each volume housed in the publisher’s slipcase and the four volumes housed together in a book-back cloth clamshell case with multicolor morocco spines by Zaehnsdorf. DB 00146. $6,500 One of 500 Copies Signed by A.A. Milne 74. MILNE, A.A. A Gallery of Children. Illustrations by Saida (H. Willebeek Le Mair). London: [1925]. Edition de Luxe. Limited to 500 copies (of which 485 are for sale), numbered and signed by the author. Large quarto. Color pictorial title and twelve color plates. Original white buckram over bevelled boards pictorially stamped and lettered in gilt. Very slight soiling to cloth, endpapers lightly foxed. Short tear to outer margin of one leaf. Otherwise a near fine copy. DB 00147. $1,500 Monnier’s “Theatrical Gallery” 75. [MONNIER, Henry, illustrator]. Galerie Théâtrale. Paris: [n.d., 1828]. Large folio. Twenty-four hand-colored lithographed plates. All plates mounted on guards. Nineteenth-century half brown morocco over marbled boards. Smooth spine decoratively tooled and lettered in gilt. Light rubbing to extremities. Some minor foxing and/or soiling. A One of a Few Copies with an Original Pencil Drawing by Barry Moser 76. [MOSER, Barry, illustrator]. [PENNYROYAL PRESS]. BAUM, L. Frank. The Wonderful Wizard of Oz…With an Appreciation by Justin G. Schiller. West Hatfield, Massachusetts: 1985. Limited to 350 numbered copies, signed by Barry Moser. One of a few copies with an original signed pencil drawing by Barry Moser. In this copy the drawing is of “Dorothy in the Golden Cap.” Large quarto. Sixty-two wood engravings. Bound by David Bourbeau at the Thistle Bindery in Barcham Green Dewint paper over boards with front cover embossed and lettered in gilt and back cover embossed and lettered in blind. A mint copy. Housed in a cloth clamshell case. Laid in is a copy of the pamphlet “Forty-Seven Days to Oz, A Chronicle of the Studies for the Illustrations for The Wonderful Wizard of Oz by Barry Moser, Published by Pennyroyal Press, 1985.” DB 00269. $2,500 The Norwegian Polar Expedition, 1893-1896 77. NANSEN, Fridtjof. Fridtjof Nansen’s “Farthest North.” Being the Record of a Voyage of Exploration of the Ship Fram 1893-96 and of a Fifteen Months’ Sleigh Journey by Dr. Nansen and Lieut. Johansen… Westminster: 1897. First edition in English of Nansen’s own account of his polar expedition in 1893-1896 (first published in 1897 as Fram over Polhavet. Den norske polarfærd 1893-1896). Two large octavo volumes. Etched frontispiece portrait, two photogravure plates, sixteen colored lithographic plates, 110 plates and ninety-two text illustrations, mostly from photographs, and four folding color maps. Original blue-green cloth pictorially stamped and lettered in gilt. Minor rubbing to extremities, front hinge of each volume cracked, but sound, slight discoloration to cloth on spine of Volume II. Some occasional minor foxing. Overall, an excellent copy. DB 00519. $600 A Superb Copy in the Original Green Vellum Binding 78. [NIELSEN, Kay, illustrator]. QUILLER-COUCH, Sir Arthur. In Powder & Crinoline. Old Fairy Tales Retold by Sir Arthur Quiller-Couch. London: [n.d., 1913]. Edition de Luxe. Limited to 500 copies, numbered and signed by the artist. Large quarto. Inserted title and twenty-six mounted color plates. Original full green vellum over boards pictorially stamped and lettered in gilt. Later green silk ties. Covers very slightly bowed, minimal wear to extremities, endpapers a little foxed. A near fine copy of this title, which usually appears with the green vellum badly discolored. The gilt is fresh and bright. DB 00152. $6,500 One of the Greatest American Playwrights 79. O’NEILL, Eugene. The Plays of Eugene O’Neill. New York: [19341935]. Wilderness Edition. Limited to 770 numbered sets, signed by the author in Volume I. Twelve octavo volumes. Photogravure frontispieces. Designed by Elmer Adler and printed on specially watermarked paper. Original russet buckram decoratively stamped and lettered in gilt. A fine set. DB 00739. $1,500 Papworth’s “Select Views of London,” with Seventy-Six Hand-Colored Aquatint Plates few tiny marginal tears. Two bookplates on front pastedown. Small ink stamp on the verso of thirteen plates. An excellent copy. “The theme of the street entertainer was popular with lithographers, although with the notable exception of Daumier, their miserable state was not often depicted…Monnier, a playwright and actor as well as a draftsman, included this low theatrical form in his Galerie théâtrale, which is otherwise devoted to scenes of actors, rehearsals, and back-stage life of the indoor legitimate theatre” (Beatrice Farwell, The Charged Image, p. 112). DB 00501. $5,500 16 80. PAPWORTH, John P. Select Views of London; with Historical and Descriptive Sketches of Some of the Most Interesting of Its Public Buildings. London: 1816. First edition, first issue, with Papworth’s name on the titlepage. Large octavo. Seventy-six handcolored aquatint plates (five doublepage and folding). Plates watermarked 1815. Contemporary Regency calf, neatly rebacked, with original spine laid down. Covers decoratively bordered in gilt, spine decoratively tooled in gilt in compartments with black morocco gilt lettering label. A little light offsetting from the plates to the text. Armorial bookplate of Frank Brewer Bemis and bookplate of Gladys Robinson on the front pastedown. An excellent early copy. Housed in a cloth slipcase. DB 00640. $9,500 The Tamerlane Edition of the Works of Edgar Allan Poe 81. POE, Edgar Allan. The Complete Works of Edgar Allan Poe. Edited and Chronologically Arranged on the Basis of the Standard Text, with Certain Additional Material and with a Critical Introduction by Charles F. Richardson…Illustrated by Frederick Simpson Coburn. New York: [1902]. Tamerlane Edition. Limited to 300 numbered sets printed on Ruisdael hand-made paper. Ten octavo volumes. Photogravure frontispieces and plates in two states (one of the frontispieces in color). Contemporary olive green morocco. Covers decoratively panelled in gilt, spines decoratively tooled and lettered in gilt in compartments, board edges and turn-ins ruled in gilt, mauve morocco doublures decoratively tooled in gilt, pink watered silk liners, top edge gilt, others uncut. Spines uniformly faded to brown. A fine set. DB 00565. $19,500 One of 250 Copies Signed by Cole Porter 82. PORTER, Cole. Red Hot and Blue. A Musical Comedy. New York: 1936. First edition. Limited to 300 numbered copies, signed by Cole Porter. Folio. Original red, white, and blue watered silk over boards. from the 1936 Broadway musical which starred Ethel Merman, Jimmy Durante, and Bob Hope. DB 00158. $6,500 “They Call Me ‘Peter Rabbit’!!” 83. POTTER, Beatrix. Autograph Letter Signed by Beatrix Potter to a Miss Joy Shapland, Bellaire, Barnstaple, N. Devon, Sept[ember] 26 [19]13. Four octavo pages. With three original drawings by Beatrix Potter of her pet pigs, including “Little Pig Robinson.” Together with the original envelope. A wonderful and unique item. “I have had a photograph of you and two nice funny pictures of Mrs Tittlemouse since last June! It is almost too late to say ‘thank you’; you will be quite surprised to get a letter. I was very ill last spring—I thought it was the last of ‘Peter Rabbit’, and since then I have been drawing [three pigs drawn in the letter]—dozens of pigs! I have been so tired of them, but the printers said all the little friends would be disappointed if I did not screw out my usual Christmas book. I’m afraid it is not very good this time, but I have done my best; and I am well again, so I hope to do better next year. You do look a funny little fatty, lying amongst the Sea pinks, if Mrs Tittlemouse were there, I’m sure she would want to kiss you and tickle you! I have Sea pinks in my garden—‘thrift’ sometimes we call it; and I have six little Spotty pigs in a stye. Just now I am up in London to see about printing, so I have found time to answer your letter. I am glad you like ‘Mrs Tittlemouse’, I am fond of her too, and I like going round with a mop & doing house work; but the children in the village where I live don’t call me that name—they call me ‘Peter Rabbit’!! A friend of mine has got a gray squirrel called ‘Joy’, she is very tame & lives in a big parrot cage. Much love from Beatrix Potter.” DB 00777. $30,000 A Fine Copy of “The Fairy Caravan”— the Only Signed Limited Beatrix Potter Book 84. POTTER, Beatrix. The Fairy Caravan. Philadelphia: David McKay Company, [1929]. Autographed Edition. Limited to 100 numbered copies, signed by Beatrix Potter. Small quarto. Six color plates, twenty Front cover and spine lettered in gilt. Spine very slightly faded. Minimal wear and fraying to corners. A little bit of brown glue staining to inner hinges, as usual. An excellent copy (much better than is usually seen), with the gilt very bright. Contains the sheet music for ten Cole Porter songs (including the popular “It’s De-Lovely” and “Red, Hot and Blue”) 17 full-page black and white illustrations, and forty-two black and white vignettes in the text. Original dark green cloth with color pictorial label on front cover. Spine lettered in gilt. Minimal rubbing to corners and spine extremities, a couple of tiny marks on the back cover, front hinge expertly and almost invisibly repaired, rear hinge just starting, but sound. Previous owner’s ink inscription on front free endpaper. A lovely copy, internally fine, of this notoriously rare book. In the original color pictorial dust jacket. The jacket is the finest that we have ever seen, with only a couple of tiny little nicks on the edges. This edition contains an inserted limitation leaf bearing the following statement: “The autographed edition of this book is limited to one hundred copies, none of which will be offered for sale. This copy is number 21. It is presented with the compliments of the author.” The Autographed Edition does not appear in Linder, Quinby, or V & A. DB 00695. $14,500 Beatrix Potter’s Privately Printed Ambleside Edition of “The Fairy Caravan” 85. POTTER, Beatrix. The Fairy Caravan by Beatrix Heelis (“Beatrix Potter”). [Philadelphia and London]: Copyright of the Author, 1929. Beatrix Potter’s privately printed Ambleside edition. One of 100 copies, with the first nine leaves printed at Ambleside and the remaining sections from the sheets of David McKay’s Philadelphia edition. Large An Original Watercolor Drawing of Peter Rabbit by Beatrix Potter 87. POTTER, Beatrix. “Peter Rabbit Sledging.” [N.p.: n.d., ca. 19001910]. Early pen-and-ink and watercolor drawing. Depicts two rabbits, wearing blue sweaters, in the snow, with one rabbit pulling a sled which has overturned on the other rabbit. Image size: 3 x 4 inches; 90 x 115 mm. Exhibited: The British Art of Illustration 1800-1995. Matted, framed, and glazed. DB 00626. $52,500 The First Privately Printed Edition of Beatrix Potter’s Scarce Second Book 88. POTTER, Beatrix. The Tailor of Gloucester. [London]: December 1902. First (privately printed) edition of Beatrix Potter’s scarce second book. One of 500 copies printed. Twelvemo. Color frontispiece and fifteen color plates. Original pink boards pictorially stamped and lettered in black on front cover. Minimal foxing to boards and endpapers. Otherwise a mint copy. Housed in a morocco clamshell case. “Her octavo. Frontispiece and five color plates, twenty-one full-page black and white illustrations (including the vignette of seven dogs on p. [5]), and forty-two black and white vignettes in the text. Loosely inserted in a cloth chemise are the first eighteen pages of the Philadelphia edition, together with a duplicate set of the first eighteen pages of the Ambleside edition. Original quarter dark green cloth over green boards. Front cover lettered in dark green. Spine extremities a tiny bit creased. A very fine copy of this extremely scarce Beatrix Potter item. Housed in a morocco clamshell case. “In the privately bound copies of The Fairy Caravan, the first eighteen pages of the American edition, including the preface and dedication page, were discarded, and a new set of pages printed at Ambleside. An additional page was added on which were sketches of dogs she knew” (Linder, pp. 292-294). DB 00766. $15,500 First Edition of “Ginger & Pickles,” in the Original Printed Glassine Dust Jacket 86. POTTER, Beatrix. Ginger & Pickles. London: 1909. First edition. Small quarto. Color frontispiece and nine full-page color illustrations. Black and white vignette on the title-page and nineteen black and white vignettes in the text. Original greenish-tan boards decoratively stamped and lettered in darker green. Color pictorial label on front cover. Previous owner’s ink presentation inscription on half-title. A near fine copy. In an original slightly later (ca. 1911) glazed paper glassine dust jacket printed in black. Jacket with a closed tear to front panel and another to rear panel, not affecting text. DB 00685. $4,750 18 privately printed edition of Peter Rabbit having enjoyed some success, Beatrix Potter decided to have this next work brought out in the same manner…It has a format similar to the privately printed Peter Rabbit, but with a binding of pink printed boards” (Morgan Library, Early Children’s Books, 221). DB 00663. $6,500 First Published Edition of “The Tailor of Gloucester,” in the Original Deluxe Floral Cloth Binding 89. POTTER, Beatrix. The Tailor of Gloucester. London: 1903. First published edition, first issue (printed October 1903), with a singlepage endpaper occurring four times. Twelvemo. Color frontispiece and twenty-six color plates. Eleven of the illustrations are repeated from the December 1902 privately printed edition and seventeen are new for this edition. Original deluxe floral cloth binding. Front cover with two white cloth gilt lettering labels. Spine a little darkened, with minimal rubbing to extremities. Some very light marginal soiling. Small “Punch” figure neatly stamped in the blank center of the front pastedown. An excellent copy. Previous owner’s ink inscription on front free endpaper. Housed in a cloth slipcase decoratively tooled in gilt. The floral cloth fabric, which was also used on the deluxe binding of The Tale of Squirrel Nutkin, came from Beatrix Potter’s grandfather’s firm, Edmund Potter & Co. of Dinting Vale, Manchester. Beatrix Potter referred to these two books as “bound in a flowered lavender chintz, very pretty” (Linder, pp. 138-140). DB 00664. $9,500 First Published Edition of “The Tailor of Gloucester,” in the Rare Original Printed Glassine Dust Jacket 90. POTTER, Beatrix. The Tailor of Gloucester. London: 1903. First published edition, first issue (printed October 1903), with a singlepage endpaper occurring four times. Twelvemo. Color frontispiece and twenty-six color plates. Eleven of the illustrations are repeated from the December 1902 privately printed edition and seventeen are new for this edition. Original maroon boards ruled and lettered in white. Color pictorial label on front cover. Minimal fading to spine. Small bookseller’s label on rear pastedown. Otherwise a very fine copy. In the rare original glazed paper glassine dust jacket printed in black. The jacket has a few very small chips along the top edge, but it is certainly the finest jacket for this title that we have ever seen. DB 00665. $17,500 First Edition of “Benjamin Bunny,” in the Original Printed Glassine Dust Jacket 91. POTTER, Beatrix. The Tale of Benjamin Bunny. London: 1904. First edition. Twelvemo. Color frontispiece and twenty-six color plates. Black and white vignette on title-page. Original tan boards ruled and lettered in dark green. Color pictorial label on front cover. Minimal darkening to board edges. Otherwise a near fine copy. In the original glazed paper glassine dust jacket printed in black. Small pieces are missing from the top and bottom of the jacket spine (including the price), as well as a small piece missing on the back panel. DB 00667. $8,500 First Edition of “Benjamin Bunny,” in the Original Deluxe Cloth Binding 92.POTTER, Beatrix. The Tale of Benjamin Bunny. London: 1904. First edition. Twelvemo. Color frontispiece and twenty-six color plates. Black and white vignette on title-page. Original deluxe binding of tan cloth decoratively stamped and lettered in gilt. Color pictorial label on front cover. All edges gilt. The bare minimum of rubbing to corners and spine extremities. A few tiny faint ink splatters on pp. 70 and 71 and a tiny abrasion in the lower blank margin, where they were once adhered to one another. Otherwise a very fine copy. DB 00733. $12,500 First Edition of “Jemima Puddle-Duck,” Signed by Beatrix Potter and in the Original Printed Glassine Dust Jacket 93. POTTER, Beatrix. The Tale of Jemima Puddle-Duck. London: 1908. First edition. Signed by the author/illustrator (“Beatrix Potter”) on the half-title. Twelvemo. Color frontispiece and twenty-six color plates. Black and white vignette on title-page. Original green boards ruled and lettered in white. Color pictorial label on front cover. The spine is a little bit darkened and has been expertly strengthened at the top and bottom. Small stain in the lower margin of the rear endpapers, just touching into the book. Pages 32 and 33 were once adhered together in the lower blank margin, resulting in some minor surface loss from p. 33 onto p. 32. A very good copy. In the scarce original glazed paper glassine dust jacket printed in black. The jacket has been expertly strengthened at the top and bottom of the spine, not affecting any lettering. Otherwise this is a remarkably fine jacket. Housed in a morocco clamshell case. DB 00680. $18,500 First Edition of “Jemima Puddle-Duck,” in the Original Printed Glassine Dust Jacket 94. POTTER, Beatrix. The Tale of Jemima PuddleDuck. London: 1908. First edition. Twelvemo. Color frontispiece and twentysix color plates. Black and white vignette on title-page. Original gray boards ruled and lettered in white. Color pictorial label on front cover. A near fine copy. In the scarce original glazed paper glassine dust jacket printed in black. Apart from some light creasing, this jacket is in remarkably fine condition. DB 00769. $14,500 First Issue of “Johnny Town-Mouse,” Incribed by Beatrix Potter and in the Original Printed Glassine Dust Jacket 95. POTTER, Beatrix. The Tale of Johnny Town-Mouse. Londo[n]: [n.d., December 1918]. First edition, first issue (printed December 1918), with the final “n” missing in “London” on the title-page. Presenta19 tion copy, inscribed by the author/illustrator on the front free endpaper: “Miss Wheelwright/with kind regards from/ ‘Beatrix Potter’/Dec 18.18.” Twelvemo. Color frontispiece and twenty-six color plates. Black and white vignette on title-page. Original gray-green boards ruled and lettered in white. Color pictorial label on front cover. Minimal rubbing. Minor marginal soiling to a few leaves. A near fine copy. In the rare original glazed paper glassine dust jacket printed in black (different from the “advertising runner” described by Quinby). There is a piece missing at the upper edge of the rear panel, not affecting any text. Housed in a calf clamshell case. DB 00692. $18,500 First Edition of “Mrs. Tiggy-Winkle,” Signed by Beatrix Potter and in the Original Glassine Dust Jacket 96. POTTER, Beatrix. The Tale of Mrs. Tiggy-Winkle. London: 1905. First edition. Signed by the author/illustrator (“Beatrix Potter”) on the verso of the frontispiece. Twelvemo. Color frontispiece and twenty-six color plates. Black and white vignette on title-page. Original brown boards ruled and lettered in white. Color pictorial paper label on front cover. Expert repair to rear joint. Some minor marginal soiling. Pages 10 and 11 were once adhered to one another, causing loss of half of the word “kins” in line 6 on p. 10 (it is all actually present, but stuck onto the opposite page). Blindstamp of W.H. Smith & Son, London, on front free endpaper. Previous owner’s ink signature on half-title and small red ink stamp on half-title and verso of half-title. A very good copy. In the original glazed paper glassine dust jacket printed in black. Some tears to jacket spine, with the top 1/4 inch chipped away. Housed in a morocco clamshell case. DB 00670. $18,500 The First Trade Edition of “Peter Rabbit” 97. POTTER, Beatrix. The Tale of Peter Rabbit. London: [n.d., 1902]. First Warne edition, first, second, or third printing (October-December 1902), all identical. Twelvemo. Color frontispiece and thirty color plates. Black and white vignette on titlepage. Original dark brown boards lettered in white. Color pictorial label on front cover. Gray leaf-patterned endpapers. Some very minor rubbing to bottom of rear joint, small 20 split to front hinge at bottom, text block very slightly shaken. A little bit of foxing, mainly to edges and endpapers, and a tiny bit of marginal soiling. A very good copy. “There are no recognizable differences between the first three printings, except that green boards were introduced after the first printing” (Linder, p. 421). DB 00662. $10,500 First Edition of “Pigling Bland,” Inscribed by Beatrix Potter and in the Original Printed Glassine Dust Jacket 98. POTTER, Beatrix. The Tale of Pigling Bland. London: 1913. First edition. Presentation copy, inscribed by the author/illustrator on the verso of the frontispiece: “With love to Ruth/from/Cousin Beatrix/Dec. 1913.” Twelvemo. Color frontispiece and fourteen color plates. Black and white vignette on the title-page and thirty-seven black and white vignettes in the text. Original maroon boards decoratively stamped and lettered in white. Color pictorial label on front cover. Boards a little bit faded, neat repair to rear joint, top and bottom of spine worn, lettering on spine a little bit rubbed, especially at the bottom. A couple of small marginal ink stains between pp. 8 and 9. A very good copy. In the rare original glazed paper glassine dust jacket printed in black. Apart from a small piece chipped away at the top of the spine, not affecting any text, the jacket is near fine. DB 00690. $11,500 First Edition of “The Tale of Samuel Whiskers,” Signed by Beatrix Potter 99. POTTER, Beatrix. The Tale of Samuel Whiskers or The Roly-Poly Pudding. London: [1926]. First edition in this format (originally published in 1908 in large format as The Roly-Poly Pudding). Signed by the author/illustrator (“Beatrix Potter”) on the half-title. Twelvemo. Eighteen full-page color illustrations. Thirty-nine black and white vignettes in the text. Original red boards ruled and lettered in white. Color pictorial label on front cover. Boards slightly faded, corners a tiny bit bumped, front hinge strengthened. The color of the spine has been touched up a little bit. A very good copy. Scarce. DB 00683. $4,850 First Edition of “Squirrel Nutkin,” in the Original Printed Glassine Dust Jacket 100. POTTER, Beatrix. The Tale of Squirrel Nutkin. London: [November] 1903. First edition, third printing, with “1903” and the words “Author of ‘The Tale of Peter Rabbit’” on the title-page. Twelvemo. Color frontispiece and twenty-six color plates. Black and white vignette on title-page. Original dark blue boards ruled and lettered in white. Color pictorial label on front cover. Ink presentation inscription on the verso of the frontispiece: “To Ruthie Smith/from ‘Wheel’. /[flourish]/ Xmas 1903.” An absolutely mint copy. In the original glazed paper glassine dust jacket printed in black. The jacket has some chipping at the top and bottom edges, including a small piece missing from the bottom of the spine (with loss of the “ET” in the word “NET”) and a small piece missing from the fold of the rear flap, but generally, it is wonderfully complete. DB 00666. $10,500 First Edition of “The Tale of the Flopsy Bunnies,” in the Original Printed Glassine Dust Jacket 101. POTTER, Beatrix. The Tale of the Flopsy Bunnies. London: 1909. First edition, first or second printing, with the Notice Board in the illustration on p. 14. Twelvemo. Color frontispiece and twenty-six color plates. Black and white vignette on title-page. Original dark green boards ruled and lettered in white. Color pictorial label on front cover. Spine minimally darkened. Small split to front hinge. Otherwise a fine copy. In the original (possibly earlier) glazed paper glassine dust jacket printed in black. Jacket with a little fraying at the top of the spine, otherwise near fine (this jacket has been on the book for its entire life, causing the darkening on the spine). Housed in a quarter morocco clamshell case. DB 00684. $7,500 First Edition of “Timmy Tiptoes,” in the Original Printed Glassine Dust Jacket 102. POTTER, Beatrix. The Tale of Timmy Tiptoes. London: 1911. First edition. Twelvemo. Color frontispiece and twenty-six color plates. Black and white vignette on title-page. Original dark green boards ruled and lettered in white. Cover pictorial label on front cover. A near mint copy. In the original glazed paper glassine dust jacket printed in black. A remarkable and complete jacket, with only a tiny bit of chipping at the top and bottom of the spine and a closed tear at the bottom of the spine. DB 00687. $7,500 First Edition of “Timmy Tiptoes,” in the Original Deluxe Cloth Binding 103. POTTER, Beatrix. The Tale of Timmy Tiptoes. London: 1911. First edition. Twelvemo. Color frontispiece and twenty-six color plates. Black and white vignette on titlepage. Original deluxe binding of green cloth decoratively stamped and lettered in gilt. Color pictorial label on front cover. All edges gilt. The bare minimum of rubbing to corners and spine extremities. Otherwise an absolutely mint copy. Previous owner’s ink signature on front free endpaper. Small bookseller’s ticket on rear pastedown. Housed in a morocco clamshell case. DB 00688. $8,500 First Edition of “Tom Kitten,” Inscribed by Beatrix Potter and in the Original Printed Glassine Dust Jacket 104. POTTER, Beatrix. The Tale of Tom Kitten. London: 1907. First edition. Presentation copy, inscribed by the author/illustrator on the front free endpaper: “For Kate,/with love from/Beatrix Potter./Christmas 1907.” Twelvemo. Color frontispiece and twentysix color plates. Black and white vignette on titlepage. Original greenish brown boards ruled and lettered in white. Color pictorial paper label on front cover. There is some evidence (glue visible at p. 40) that the lower portion (about 1 inch) of the book may been tightened a little. The top half of the book has never been touched. Otherwise a near fine copy. In the original glazed paper glassine dust jacket printed in black. The jacket is in fine condition. DB 00678. $18,500 First Edition of “Tom Kitten,” in the Original Printed Glassine Dust Jacket 105. P O T T E R , Beatrix. The Tale of Tom Kitten. London: 1907. First edition. Twelvemo. Color frontispiece and twenty-six color plates. Black and white vignette on title-page. Original greenish brown boards ruled and lettered in white. Color pictorial paper label on front cover. A fine copy. In the original glazed paper glassine dust jacket printed in black. The jacket is in fine condition. DB 00770. $14,500 First Edition of “The Tale of Two Bad Mice,” in the Original Deluxe Cloth Binding and Glassine Dust Jacket 106. POTTER, Beatrix. The Tale of Two Bad Mice. London: 1904. First edition. Twelvemo. Color frontispiece and twenty-six color plates. Black and white vignette on title-page (expertly hand-colored in this copy). Original deluxe binding of maroon cloth decoratively stamped and lettered in gilt. Color pictorial label on front cover. All edges gilt. Minimal rubbing to spine extremities and corners. There is a very 21 small watercolor stain in the margin of the title-page and in the lower margin of the frontispiece. Previous owner’s inscription on the front free endpaper. Otherwise an excellent copy. In the original plain glazed paper glassine dust jacket. DB 00668. $7,750 A Superb Original Arthur Rackham Watercolor Drawing for Nathaniel Hawthorne’s “A Wonder Book” 107. RACKHAM, Arthur. “The Paradise of Children.” London: 1922. Original pen-and-ink and watercolor drawing for the tinted line drawing illustrating “The Paradise of Children” (“Pandora’s Box”) in Nathaniel Hawthorne’s A Wonder Book (London: [n.d., 1922]). Signed and dated at lower right. Image size: 15 x 11 inches (381 x 279 mm.). Matted, framed, and glazed. This charming watercolor drawing depicts life as mounted on heavy brown paper. Four drawings in black and white. Original vellum over boards pictorially stamped and lettered in gilt. Later green silk ties. Map of Kensington Gardens on front free endpaper. The spine is very slightly darkened and the gilt on the spine is a little dull. Otherwise a fine copy. Previous owner’s ink presentation inscription, dated Christmas 1906, on the dedication leaf. “This was the book which first made Rackham’s work famous” (The Oxford Companion to Children’s Literature). DB 00652. $7,500 Extremely Scarce 1912 Deluxe Edition of Arthur Rackham’s “Peter Pan in Kensington Gardens” 109. [RACKHAM, Arthur, illustrator]. BARRIE, J.M. Peter Pan in Kensington Gardens. From The Little White Bird by J.M. Barrie. A New Edition. London: [n.d., 1912]. Deluxe edition, one of fifty (?) copies. it was before Pandora opened the “great ugly box.” “The moment one opens Hawthorne’s Wonder Book one becomes aware of the rounding and softening of form in Rackham’s work. The modern Pandora of Hawthorne opens her box for the world in 1921, and she is a very living young girl, with breasts just beginning to swell, indicating that Rackham was aware of the undertones of this story which is being retold with every lifetime. In ‘The Paradise of Children’…the children are drawn in line, but the washes of colour give them a rotundity of form and a very human life. The point which Rackham is making, surely, is that these are real children, a real Pandora, and not some dream from fairy land” (Fred Gettings, Arthur Rackham, p. 141). DB 00625. $38,500 Signed Limited Edition of Arthur Rackham’s “Peter Pan in Kensington Gardens” 108. [RACKHAM, Arthur, illustrator]. BARRIE, J.M. Peter Pan in Kensington Gardens (From “The Little White Bird”). London: 1906. Deluxe edition. Limited to 500 copies, numbered and signed by the artist (this being copy No. 2). Large quarto. Color frontispiece and forty-nine color plates 22 Large quarto. Fifty mounted color plates, seven full-page black and white drawings, and fifteen black and white drawings in the text. Map of Kensington Gardens on the verso of the contents leaf. Full red morocco by Zaehnsdorf. Front cover pictorially stamped and lettered in gilt to match the original cover stamping. A little bit of foxing. An excellent copy. Reprint of the 1906 edition with a new color frontispiece and seven additional full-page black and white drawings. DB 00581. $4,500 Edition de Luxe, Signed by Arthur Rackham 110. [RACKHAM, Arthur, illustrator]. DICKENS, Charles. A Christmas Carol. London: [1915]. Limited to 525 numbered copies, of which 500 are for sale in Great Britain, Ireland and Colonies, signed by the artist. Large quarto. Twelve color plates mounted on heavy brown paper and twenty drawings in black and white. Original vellum over boards pictorially stamped and lettered in gilt. Yellow silk ties renewed. The gilt on the spine is very slightly rubbed. Expertly repaired tear to rear free endpaper. Otherwise a near fine copy. DB 00386. $3,750 One of 750 Copies Signed by Arthur Rackham 111. [RACKHAM, Arthur, illustrator]. [GRIMM, Jakob and Wilhelm]. The Fairy Tales of the Brothers Grimm. Translated by Mrs. Edgar Lucas. London: 1909. Edition de Luxe. Limited to 750 numbered copies for sale in Great Britain and Ireland, signed by the artist. Large quarto. Forty mounted color plates and forty-five drawings in black and white (nine full-page). Original vellum over boards pictorially stamped and lettered in gilt. Yellow silk ties renewed. Minimal rubbing to extremities, slight discoloration to vellum, endpapers very lightly foxed. Some very minor offsetting from the text illustrations. A few tiny marginal tears. Short crease to plate facing p. 90. Two small stains to verso of mount for plate facing p. 128. Overall, an excellent copy. Housed in a quarter morocco slipcase. “Reprinted from the 1900 edition, with added illustrations and larger pages” (Latimore and Haskell, p. 34). DB 00474. $6,500 In the Very Scarce Original Dust Jacket 112. [RACKHAM, Arthur, illustrator]. GRIMM, [Jakob and Wilhelm]. Hansel & Grethel & Other Tales by the Brothers Grimm. London: [1920]. First separate edition (originally published in Arthur Rackham’s The Fairy Tales of the Brothers Grimm (London: 1909)). Quarto. Twenty mounted color plates and twenty-eight black and white drawings in the text. Original dark blue cloth pictorially stamped and lettered in gilt. Free endpapers slightly browned from pastedown glue. Tiny bookseller’s label on front pastedown. A fine copy. In the very scarce original tan paper dust jacket printed in dark blue, the front panel matching the gilt stamping on the front cover of the book and the back panel with publisher’s advertisements (jacket spine very slightly darkened). DB 00543. $1,250 One of Eleven Special Copies with an Original Watercolor Drawing by Arthur Rackham 113. [RACKHAM, Arthur, illustrator]. IBSEN, Henrik. Peer Gynt. A Dramatic Poem…London: [1936]. Limited to 460 numbered copies (of which 450 are for sale), signed by the artist. One of eleven special copies (this copy being No. 11) containing an original watercolor drawing (on an inserted leaf between the half-title and the frontispiece) signed and dated at lower left: “Arthur Rackham/1936.” The drawing depicts a young Peer Gynt being attacked by a group of troll imps and running for his life through a forest of anthropomorphic trees. Large quarto. Twelve mounted color plates and numerous black and white illustrations in the text. Specially bound by Sangorski & Sutcliffe in full green morocco decoratively stamped and lettered in gilt. Original pictorial endpapers bound in. Bookplate on front pastedown. Spine slightly faded, otherwise a very fine copy. DB 00268. $35,000 One of 750 Copies Signed by Arthur Rackham 114. [RACKHAM, Arthur, illustrator]. LAMB, Charles and Mary. Tales from Shakespeare. London: 1909. Limited to 750 numbered copies, signed by the artist. Large quarto. Thirteen mounted color plates, including the additional plate not present in the trade edition. Two full-page illustrations in black and white, twenty chapter headings, and fourteen tail-pieces. Original white buckram decoratively stamped and lettered in gilt. Original rose-colored silk ties. A fine copy. DB 00579. $2,500 One of Ten Special Copies with an Original Watercolor Drawing by Arthur Rackham 115. [RACKHAM, Arthur, illustrator]. POE, Edgar Allan. Tales of Mystery & Imagination. London: [1935]. Limited to 460 numbered copies (of which 450 are for sale), signed by the artist. One of ten special copies (this copy being No. 5) containing an original watercolor drawing (on an inserted leaf between the half-title and the frontispiece), signed and dated at lower right: “Arthur Rackham/1935.” The drawing depicts a man in his pajamas, with his red slippers on, and a ghost-like skeleton coming up beside him giving him a fright, causing his hair to stand on end and causing him to drop his copy of Poe’s Tales. Large quarto. Twelve mounted color plates, seventeen black and white plates, and eleven small black and white drawings in the text. Specially bound by Sangorski & Sutcliffe in full green morocco decoratively stamped and lettered in gilt. Original pictorial endpapers bound in. Spine slightly faded, otherwise a fine copy. In the original cardboard slipcase with printed spine label with matching limitation number (lower edge of slipcase expertly and almost invisibly replaced). DB 00267. $37,500 23 With Two Original Signed Pen-and-Ink Drawings by Arthur Rackham 116. [RACKHAM, Arthur, illustrator]. WAGNER, Richard. The Rhinegold & The Valkyrie. [Together with:] Siegfried & The Twilight of the Gods. Translated by Margaret Armour. London: 1910-1911. First trade editions. Two quarto volumes. Each volume with an original penand-ink drawing, signed and dated by Arthur Rackham. The Rhinegold & The Valkyrie with thirty-four mounted color plates and fourteen drawings in black and white and Siegfried & The Twilight of the Gods with thirty mounted color plates and nine drawings in black and white. Original light brown buckram pictorially stamped and lettered in gilt. Minimal rubbing to extremities. Slight browning, primarily to leaves preceding and following plates. A few tiny tears and creases to upper edge of two leaves in Siegfried & The Twilight of the Gods. Otherwise near fine copies. DB 00360. $4,500 An Early English Edition of the Reynard Fables 117. [REYNARD THE FOX]. The Most Delectable History of Reynard the Fox. Newly Corrected and Purged, from all grossness in Phrase and Matter…London: 1701. [Bound with:] The Most Pleasant and Delightful History of Reynard the Fox. The Second Part…London: [And:] The Shifts of Reynardine The Son of Reynard the Fox, Or a Pleasant History of His Life and Death…London: 1684. Three parts in one small quarto volume. Sixty-two woodcuts in the first part, printed from thirty-nine blocks, and fifteen woodcuts in the second part, five repeated, all repeats from the first part. Most cuts signed “E.B.” (Edward Brewster). Contemporary sprinkled sheep with covers decoratively tooled in blind and spine decoratively tooled in gilt in compartments with two red morocco gilt lettering labels. Minor restoration to covers. Some browning, occasional light dampstaining and soiling. Part I with tiny puncture marks in the lower blank margin through gathering I, just touching one letter in the imprint on the title-page, six small holes in I3 and one tiny hole in I4, causing loss of a couple of letters. A few minor marginal paper flaws. Armorial bookplate of Gloucester on front free endpaper. Bookplate of Hugh Cecil Lowther, 5th Earl of Lonsdale (1857-1944) on front pastedown. An excellent copy. DB 00654. $18,500 W. Heath Robinson’s “Book of Goblins” 118. [ROBINSON, W. Heath, illustrator]. Heath Robinson’s Book of Goblins. A Collection of Folk-Lore and Fairy Tales…London: [n.d., 1934]. First edition. Quarto. Seven color plates, eight full-page and forty-five smaller black and white line drawings, and ninety-three black and white vignettes of goblins. Original blue cloth pictorially stamped in blind and lettered in gilt. Early ink inscription on front free endpaper. 24 Small insignificant stain on the fore-edge. A very light dampstain in the lower margin of the first few leaves. Otherwise an excellent copy. Stories “taken from Vernaleken’s collection of Bohemian folk-tales, In the Land of Marvels…The change of title was obviously an attempt by the publisher to cash in both on Heath Robinson’s reputation as a humorist and on the popularity of his already well known goblin pictures” (Beare, p. 90). DB 00544. $750 One of 500 Copies Signed by W. Heath Robinson 119. [ROBINSON, W. Heath, illustrator]. KIPLING, Rudyard. A Song of the English. London: [n.d., 1909]. First separate edition. Limited to 500 copies, numbered and signed by the artist. Large quarto. Thirty mounted color plates. Descriptive tissue guards, each with a miniature line illustration. Pictorial title and fifty-nine black and white illustrations in the text. Original vellum over boards pictorially stamped in dark green, red, and gilt and lettered in gilt and green. Later taupe silk ties. Some slight discoloration to vellum on covers and very slight rubbing to gilt on spine. Otherwise an excellent copy. DB 00176. $1,750 W. Heath Robinson’s “Midsummer-Night’s Dream” 120. [ROBINSON, W. Heath, illustrator]. SHAKESPEARE, [William]. Shakespeare’s Comedy of A Midsummer-Night’s Dream. London: 1914. First trade edition, third issue (bound in 1919). Large quarto. Twelve mounted color plates. Forty-seven full-page and nineteen smaller black and white drawings in the text. Original quarter tan linen over green linen-grain paper boards. Corners very lightly bumped. Minimal foxing. Otherwise a near fine copy. In the original brown pictorial dust jacket printed in black with the original binding design (jacket reinforced at the edges and spine folds on the verso). “As with Twelfth Night, Heath Robinson set out to recreate the atmosphere of the play rather than to provide a pictorial record of the action…It is the black and white illustrations that dominate the book” (Beare, pp. 43-44). DB 00461. $1,250 “The Adventures of Baron Munchausen” Illustrated by Thomas Rowlandson 121. [ROWLANDSON, Thomas, illustrator]. [RASPE, Rudolf Erich]. Surprising Adventures of the Renowned Baron Munchausen, Containing Singular Travels, Campaigns, Voyages, and Adventures…London: 1809. First edition illustrated by Thomas Rowlandson. Twelvemo. Nine handcolored engraved plates, including folding frontispiece. Contemporary half red straight-grain morocco over the original drab boards. Spine decoratively tooled and lettered in gilt in compartments. All edges gilt. Minimal rubbing to corners and spine extremities. Minimal offsetting from the plates. A wonderful copy. With a pencilled note on the front free endpaper: Beckford Copy. Small diamond-shaped label on the front pastedown with pencilled shelfmark: B.4. DB 00370. $3,500 First Edition of “The Catcher in the Rye,” in the Original First Issue Dust Jacket 122. SALINGER, J.D. The Catcher in the Rye. Boston: 1951. First edition of the author’s first book. Octavo. Original black cloth decoratively stamped and lettered in gilt on spine. Extremities very slightly bumped, gilt on spine a little dull. Occasional minor marginal soiling. Otherwise a near fine copy. In the original first issue color pictorial dust jacket designed by Michael Mitchell with Salinger’s photo on the rear panel by Lotte Jacobi and with the price $3.00 on the front flap. The jacket the front panel (jacket with the absolute minimum of darkening to spine, edges with a few very tiny chips at folds and one tiny closed tear on front panel). The lower corner of the front flap of the dust jacket is clipped (the front flap originally had two prices, $3.50 at the top and $3.79 at the bottom (for the Library Edition)—which this is not, so this price is clipped). This is as fine a copy of the book and dust jacket as we have ever seen. DB 00066. $17,500 First Edition of “The Cat in the Hat,” in the Rare First Issue Dust Jacket 126. SEUSS, Dr. (pseudonym of Theodor Seuss Geisel). The Cat in the Hat. [New York: 1957]. First edition, first issue. Octavo. Color illustrations throughout. Original unglazed color pictorial boards. Color pictorial is very slightly browned, but the bright red is totally unfaded—at one time, however, the jacket was taped to a Brodart and has been neatly restored in four places on the flaps, with a few letters supplied in ink, where the tape was removed. DB 00754. $9,500 “One of the Epic Events of British Exploration” 123. SCOTT, Captain R[obert] F[alcon]. Scott’s Last Expedition…Vol. I. Being the Journals of Captain R.F. Scott…Vol. II. Being the Reports of the Journeys & the Scientific Work Undertaken by Dr. E.A. Wilson and the Surviving Members of the Expedition…With Photogravure Frontispieces, 6 Original Sketches in Photogravure by Dr. E.A. Wilson, 18 Coloured Plates (16 from Drawings by Dr. Wilson), 260 Full-Page and Smaller Illustrations, from Photographs Taken by Herbert G. Ponting, and Other Members of the Expedition; Panoramas and Maps. London: 1913. First edition. Two large octavo volumes. Original blue cloth ruled in gilt and blind and lettered in gilt. Previous owner’s ink inscription on front pastedown of each volume, bookplate on front pastedown of Volume l. Some scattered foxing. A near fine set. DB 00657. $950 First Edition of “Rob Roy” 124. [SCOTT, Sir Walter]. Rob Roy…Edinburgh: 1818. First edition, first issue. Three twelvemo volumes. Complete with half-titles, but bound without the final blank leaf in Volume I. Early twentieth-century antique-style half sprinkled sheep over blue boards. Smooth spines ruled and numbered in gilt with brown calf gilt lettering label. Corners lightly rubbed. Minimal foxing and browning, a few leaves with tiny marginal paper flaws, Volume III with a tiny bit of worming at the outer edge of a few leaves. Early ink signature cut from original endpaper and mounted on front pastedown of each volume. Bookseller’s ticket on front pastedown of each volume. An excellent copy. DB 00651. $950 A Fine First Edition of “Where the Wild Things Are,” in the Rare First Issue Dust Jacket 125. SENDAK, Maurice. Where the Wild Things Are. [New York]: 1963. First edition. Oblong quarto. Color illustrations. Original color pictorial boards with dark green cloth backstrip. Color pictorial endpapers. Minimal soiling and edgewear to boards. A fine copy. In the rare original first issue matching color pictorial dust jacket without the Caldecott Medal on endpapers. Tiny area of slight discoloration on front board, small stain on back board, the bare minimum of rubbing to spine extremities, small erasure at top corner of front free endpaper. A near fine copy, far better than is usually seen. In the rare original first issue color pictorial dust jacket, with the price “200/200” on the front flap and with no mention of the “Beginner Books” series on the rear panel. Jacket with the bare minimum of rubbing at folds. DB 00381. $6,500 Katherine Ann Porter’s “Christmas Story,” with Illustrations by Ben Shahn 127. [SHAHN, Ben, illustrator]. PORTER, Katherine Anne. A Christmas Story. New York: 1967. First edition. Limited to 500 copies, signed by the author and the illustrator. Small square octavo. Eight full-page black and white illustrations, one additional black and white illustration, plus a photograph of Katherine Anne Porter’s niece, Mary Alice. Original green cloth lettered in gilt on spine. A fine copy. In the original matching green cloth slipcase decoratively stamped in gilt. DB 00159. $300 The Shakespeare Head Brontë 128. [SHAKESPEARE HEAD PRESS]. BRONTË, [Charlotte, Emily, Anne, and Patrick Branwell]. The Shakespeare Head Brontë. [In Eleven Volumes]. [Together with:] The Brontës: Their Lives, Friendships and Correspondence. In Four Volumes. [And:] The Poems of Charlotte Brontë & Patrick Branwell Brontë. [And:] The Poems of Emily Jane Brontë and Anne Brontë. [And:] The Miscellaneous and Unpublished Writings of Charlotte and Patrick Branwell Brontë. In Two Volumes. [Edited by Thomas James Wise and John Alexander Symington]. Oxford: 1931[1938]. Limited to 1,000, 750, 500, 500, and 1,000 copies, respectively. Nineteen large octavo volumes. Photogravure 25 unopened. “This important edition was based on a ‘thorough collation of the four Folios and of all the Quarto editions of the separate plays, and of subsequent editions and commentaries’…so that in textual matters it constitutes a virtual variorum” (The Oxford Companion to Shakespeare). DB 00786. $11,000 Original Pen-and-Ink Drawing by Ernest H. Shepard of Christopher Robin “Down by the Pond” 131. SHEPARD, E[rnest] H. “I’m Fishing. Don’t Talk, Anybody, Don’t Come Near! Can’t You See That The Fish Might Hear?” [N.p.: n.d.]. frontispieces and plates. Original orange buckram lettered in gilt on spines. A fine set. In the original cream-colored printed dust jackets (some very minor shelfwear to jackets). DB 00184. $7,500 The Shakespeare Head Press Spenser 129. [SHAKESPEARE HEAD PRESS]. SPENSER, Edmund. The Works of Edmund Spenser. Oxford: 1930-1932. One of 375 numbered copies on Batchelor’s Shakespeare Head handmade paper, out of a total edition of 386 copies. Eight large octavo volumes. “The text has been newly prepared from the original editions by Professor W.L. Renwick…The headings and initial letters, drawn by Joscelyne Gaskin and engraved on wood by Hilda Quick, will be printed in colour. The decorations, in Original pen-and-ink drawing reproducing the illustration on p. 58 of Now We Are Six (London: [1927]), illustrating the poem, “Down by the Pond.” Depicts Christopher Robin, at left, tip-toeing through the grass to the left, holding a fishing pole in his right hand, a bucket in his left hand, with a basket over his shoulder. At right, three ducks are walking away in the opposite direction. Image size: 4 1/2 x 8 9/16 inches; 115 x 217 mm. Signed at lower right. Matted. DB 00764. $25,000 A Wonderful Original Signed Pen-and-Ink Drawing of Winnie-the-Pooh and Tigger by Ernest H. Shepard part based on the woodcuts in the early editions but for the most part original, designed and engraved on wood by Hilda Quick, will be coloured by hand” (Publisher’s Prospectus). Bound in the original quarter green Hermitage calf gilt over marbled boards by Douglas Cockerell. Minimal rubbing to boards, a few spines very slightly faded. Minor foxing to edges. A few tiny (ink?) spots in Volume III. Otherwise a fine set. In the original glassines. With the publisher’s prospectus loosely laid in. DB 00711. $2,850 The Cambridge Shakespeare 130. SHAKESPEARE, William. The Works of William Shakespeare. Edited by William Aldis Wright. London: 18931895. Second edition of the Cambridge Shakespeare (first published in nine volumes in 1863-1866, edited by William George Clark, with W. Aldis Wright and John Glover as collaborators). “Five hundred Copies of this Edition on hand-made paper were printed in 1893[-1895].” Forty large octavo volumes. Bound by Rivière & Son in early twentieth-century threequarter royal blue morocco gilt over blue cloth boards. A near fine set. Partially 26 132. SHEPARD, E[rnest] H. “Tiggers Don’t Like Honey.” [N.p.]: 1961. Original pen-and-ink drawing reproducing the illustration on p. 23 of The House at Pooh Corner (London: [1928]), Chapter II, “In which Tigger comes to the forest and has breakfast.” Depicts Winnie-the-Pooh and Tigger sitting at the dining table, Pooh with his hand in the honey pot and Tigger, with a plate and spoon in front of him, looking quizzically at the honey jar as honey drips from his mouth. Captioned below, and signed and dated at lower right. Image size: 4 x 4 3/4 inches; 100 x 120 mm. Matted, framed, and glazed. Together with an Autograph Letter Signed by Shepard to a Miss Shirley, on Woodmancote, Lodsworth, Nr. Petworth, stationery, dated June 21st [19]61. “In answer to your request/I send you two drawings/that I have specially made for your school library./The drawing of Eeyore you/may like to have for yourself./The questions you ask me/about my methods are/best answered by my telling/you that most of my illustrative/ work is done in pen and/ink, the colour drawings being/done in watercolour. I do/but little work in oils now/but enjoy painting landscapes and/figures in watercolour. I use/models when necessary but work/without them when time is short/I choose my own subjects for/illustration morocco slipcase. Treasure Island was published on 14 November 1883, so it is most likely that the first issues had October advertisements (“5R-1083”). Copies are known with July (“5G-783”) and December advertisements (“5R-1283”). DB 00036. $32,500 The Best Edition of Stevenson’s Works 135. STEVENSON, Robert Louis. The Works of Robert Louis Stevenson. New York: 1921-1923. Vailima Edition. One of 1,030 numbered sets for the United States, out of a total edition of 2,090 sets. Twenty-six octavo and I like to keep/my original drawings, though/many of these have been sold in/the United States/With good wishes for the/welfare of your school/Yours Sincerely/Ernest H. Shepard.” DB 00763. $37,500 First Edition of “A Child’s Garden of Verses” 133. STEVENSON, Robert Louis. A Child’s Garden of Verses. London: 1885. First edition, first printing (which consisted of 1,000 copies). Small octavo. Original blue cloth over bevelled boards with publisher’s device stamped in gilt on front cover and with spine ruled and lettered in gilt. First state of binding with a curved apostrophe in the word “Child’s” and with the word “of ” in small type in the spine lettering. Minimal rubbing to corners and spine extremities, spine very slightly darkened, front hinge just starting. Otherwise a fine copy. Bookplate of Johannis Lovett and pencil signature of M.S. Slocum of Pasadena on front pastedown and bookplate of Edwin B. Holden, dated 1894, on front free endpaper. Chemised in a quarter morocco slipcase. DB 00263. $4,250 First Edition of “Treasure Island” 134. STEVENSON, Robert Louis. Treasure Island. London: 1883. First edition, first issue. Octavo. With 8 pp. advertisements, “dated 5R-1083” (with Treasure Island listed on p. 2 as having “304 pages”). Frontispiece map of Treasure Island. Original olive green diagonal fine-ribbed cloth volumes. Photogravure frontispiece portraits. With an introduction by Lloyd Osbourne in Volume I. Publisher’s deluxe binding by Stikeman & Co. for Charles Scribner’s Sons of contemporary three-quarter blue morocco over blue cloth boards. Spines decoratively tooled in gilt in compartments. A fine and attractive set. DB 00194. $9,500 First Edition of the Author’s First Book 136. THOMAS, Dylan. 18 Poems. London: Published by The Sunday Referee and The Parton Bookshop, [1934]. First edition, second issue, of the author’s first book. One of the second 250 copies bound up about a year after the first issue and published on February 21, 1936. Octavo. With an extra Parton Press advertisement leaf tipped in between the half-title and the title-page. Original black cloth with rounded spine. The Dutch gilt lettering on the spine discolored to pale green (as often, according to Rolph). Small bookplate on front pastedown. A near fine copy. In the original dust jacket. Dust jacket foxed and frayed, with a few short tears, and a small piece missing from top edge of rear panel. DB 00301. $1,850 A Fine First Edition of “Walden” 137. THOREAU, Henry D[avid]. Walden; or, Life in the Woods. Boston: 1854. First edition. Octavo. With an eight-page publisher’s catalogue, dated May, 1854, inserted between the rear endpapers. Plan of Walden Pond facing p. 307. Original brown vertically-ribbed cloth with covers decoratively stamped in blind and spine ruled in blind and lettered in gilt. Original pale yellow coated endpapers. Some very faint water spots on covers, small ink stain on rear cover, minor rubbing to extremities, short split to cloth at upper portion of rear joint. Two areas of offsetting from an inserted newspaper clipping on front endpapers. A few tiny marginal with covers ruled in blind and spine ruled and lettered in gilt. Original black coated endpapers. Just slightly skewed, the absolute minimum of wear to corners and extremities, rear inner hinge expertly and almost invisibly repaired, small abrasion at foot of front pastedown. Some very occasional browning and soiling. Paper flaw to the lower blank margin of one leaf. Previous owner’s ink inscription on front flyleaf: “T.E. Freeman/Xmas Eve. 1883.” An exceptionally fine copy, with the gilt on the spine bright and fresh. The Bradley Martin copy, with the bookplate of Mildred Greenhill on the front pastedown. Chemised in a quarter 27 tears. Occasional minor soiling or staining. Pencil annotation at head of first page of text, a few occasional pencil marks and underlinings, including a few tiny marginal red and blue pencil marks. Early ink ownership inscription on front free endpaper. Despite the aforementioned minor flaws, this is a wonderful and totally unsophisticated copy. The gilt on the spine is fresh and bright. Chemised in a quarter morocco slipcase. DB 00032. $19,500 First Edition, First Printing, of Thoreau’s First Book 138. THOREAU, Henry D[avid]. A Week on the Concord and Merrimack Rivers. Boston and Cambridge: 1849. First edition, first printing, of Thoreau’s first book. Twelvemo. Original brown cloth (BAL binding variant A, Trade Binding) with five-rule border stamped in blind on covers. Spine lettered in gilt with rules and decorative leaf-design stamped in blind. Original buff endpapers. Some wear to spine extremities, affect- ing a few letters in the publisher’s name at the foot of the spine, small split to cloth at rear joint, some slight wear to corners. The hinges are perfectly sound. Contemporary ink signatures on front free endpaper and front flyleaf. Armorial bookplate of Jacob Chester Chamberlain on front pastedown, with his acquisition slip tipped in between the rear endpapers: "From Chew Col.…Dec 27/00…J.CC.” Some neat marginal pencil notes and underlining. The three lines of type dropped by the printer on p. 396 are provided in pencil, with Chamberlain’s note concerning this textual point. A spectacular copy, totally untouched. The gilt on the spine is bright and fresh. Chemised in a full morocco pull-off case by Bradstreet. DB 00541. $19,500 A Superb William M. Timlin Original Watercolor Drawing 139. TIMLIN, William M. “Fairy Dance.” Original watercolor drawing. [N.p.]: 1920. Titled, signed in full, and dated at lower right, with Timlin’s owl device beside the title. Image size: 6 13/16 x 10 inches; 173 x 253 mm. Matted, framed, and glazed. Possibly a preliminary drawing for The Ship That Sailed to Mars (London: [1923]), as it is very similar to the illustrations for “Phoecus” and “Orpheus” in “The Star of the Classic Myths” in Part II. Depicts “the eternal wood” (“where dwelt many others whose names were potent in the fashioning of the Legends, and whose lives were great and glorious in the Golden Age of Myth”), with two dryads, or wood nymphs, wearing long flowing dresses, their long brown hair swept by the wind, holding hands, arms outstretched, spinning around. Dominating the scene is a large gnarled tree with enormous roots and spindly branches. Sitting crouched on one of the branches, is Pan, accompanying the dryads on his flute. DB 00237. $9,500 Original William M. Timlin Watercolor Drawing for “The Ship That Sailed to Mars” 140. TIMLIN, William M. “The Finished Palace of the Princess.” [N.p.: n.d., ca. 1923]. Original pen, ink, and watercolor drawing for The Ship That Sailed to Mars (London: [1923]). Signed at lower left. Image size: 10 3/4 x 8 3/4 inches; 273 x 248 mm. Matted, framed, and glazed. Together with the original leaf of accompanying calligraphic text. Image size: 11 1/4 x 7 5/8 inches; 285 x 195 mm. Also matted, framed, and glazed. Depicts a room in the Palace of the Princess with a large arched French window, with curtains hung on either side of the door. The Princess, in a golden gown, is standing in the middle, moving a rug into position. At right are three Fairies, one holding a ladder on which a second Fairy is standing, hanging a gem-hung lamp. The third Fairy is standing by a small table at far right making the final adjustments to the drapes. The text of the calligraphic leaf in black with initial letters and decorations in blue. “That night for a space, every Fairy laboured, as only Fairies can, on the unfinished Palace of the Princess, and it was soon complete. Its marble terraces were builded, and its many towers capped, and its crystal-floored halls were lit with gem-hung lamps…Then the Prince and Princess were married, and the bells rang out afresh, and on the scene shone the Double Moons the Old Man had so longed to see. All the evening, in the midst of all the merriment, the Princess held the Old Man’s hand in gratitude that could find no words, and it seemed to him that here was a Land where a man might live gladly, and for ever.” DB 00450. $37,500 Six Chromolithographed Dissolving Transformation Pictures 141. [TRANSFORMATION BOOK]. [POTTER, Beatrix]. Changing Pictures. A Book of Transformation Pictures. London: Ernest Nister, [n.d., 28 ca. 1893]. First edition. Small quarto. Six full-page chromolithographed illustrations, each with the original paper tab to operate the slats. Numerous black and white drawings in the text. Original glazed color pictorial boards with red cloth backstrip. Hinges expertly and almost invisibly repaired, endpapers slightly browned. Otherwise a fine copy. One of the three cover illustrations is by Beatrix Potter. It depicts a rabbit opening the door on a snowy morning to see a gift basket full of carrots and turnips. “In 1892 Beatrix Potter had sold a few of her drawings to a firm called Ernest Nister—a German firm of Fine Art Colour Printers who had a London office at 24, St. Bride Street, E.C.…She now [in 1894] wished to offer Nister something more ambitious, and wondered whether her story of Mr. Jeremy Fisher could be made into a booklet” (Linder, p. 175). DB 00417. $1,750 A Spectacular Copy of the First American Edition, Later Printing, of “Huckleberry Finn” 142. TWAIN, Mark. Adventures of Huckleberry Finn (Tom Sawyer’s Comrade). With One Hundred and Seventy-Four Illustrations. New York: 1885. First American edition, later printing. Octavo. Inserted frontispiece portrait, with tissue guard, and wood-engraved text illus- cover pictorially stamped and lettered in gilt and spine lettered in gilt. Minor rubbing to corners and spine extremities, just slightly skewed. Tiny tear to upper blank margin of one leaf. Previous owner’s pencilled presentation inscription on front free endpaper. Otherwise a near fine copy. Housed in a cloth slipcase. First published in French in 1873 as Le Tour du monde en quatre-vingt jours. DB 00404. $1,350 Original Louis Wain Watercolor Drawing 144. WAIN, Louis. “Puss in Sweets.” [N.p.: n.d., ca. 1890s]. Original watercolor drawing of a kitten sitting in a bag of sweets. Signed at lower left. Image size: 9 7/8 x 7 inches; 250 x 178 mm. Matted, framed, and glazed. A wonderful early example of a Louis Wain original watercolor drawing. At the end of the last century, Louis Wain (1860-1939), the Edwardian cat artist who went mad, became a household name as an illustrator of cats, whom he depicted in all sorts of activities, from skating and playing cricket to driving motor cars, attending dances, and playing musical instruments. “He invented a cat style, a cat society, a whole cat world. English cats that do not look like Louis Wain cats are ashamed of themselves” (H.G. Wells). DB 00270. $12,500 Inscribed by H.G. Wells 145. WELLS, H.G. In the Days of the Comet. New York: 1906. First American edition. Presentation copy, inscribed by the author on the half-title: “To/Doctor W. Blake Odgers./In memory of a suppressed/action/From/H.G. Wells/[flourish]./Oct 30. 07/[flourish].” Octavo. Original dark blue pictorial cloth. Minor rubbing to corners and spine extremities. Free endpapers slightly browned from pastedown glue. A few neat pencil markings and underlinings. Bookplate on front pastedown. In the original tan dust jacket printed in dark blue. The jacket, which is totally untouched, is very slightly browned and lightly foxed, with a small faint red stain at the lower corner of the rear panel and a few small holes and short tears, none affecting any text. Housed in a quarter morocco clamshell case. “‘In the Days of the Comet’ is considered the best work of the popular author of ‘The War of the Worlds,’ ‘The Time Machine,’ trations. Original dark green cloth pictorially stamped and lettered in gilt and black. Original pale peach endpapers. At one time there was a slip of paper inserted between the frontispiece and the frontispiece portrait, which has left a faint brown mark in the gutter, affecting the tissue guard for the portrait and the frontispiece. Otherwise this is as fine a copy as you could wish for, absolutely bright and fresh. Housed in a quarter morocco clamshell case. DB 00568. $9,500 First Edition in English of Jules Verne’s “Around the World in Eighty Days” 143. VERNE, Jules. The Tour of the World in Eighty Days. Boston: [July] 1873. First American edition and first edition in English, first issue, with no mention of the translator, George M. Towle, on the title-page. Small octavo. Frontispiece. Original terra cotta blindstamped cloth with front 29 ‘When the Sleeper Wakes,’ etc. It is full of romantic color and beautiful” (front panel of jacket). DB 00759. $22,500 jacket spine a little darkened with minimal chipping at extremities). DB 00313. $2,500 A Finely Bound Set of the Best Edition of the Works of H.G. Wells With an Autograph Manuscript Fragment by Walt Whitman and an Autograph Letter Signed by John Burroughs 146. WELLS, H.G. The Works of H.G. Wells. London: 1924-1927. Atlantic Edition. One of 620 numbered sets for Great Britain and Ireland, out of a total edition of 1,670 sets. Signed by H.G. Wells. Twenty-eight octavo volumes. Photogravure frontispieces. Bound ca. 1960 by Bayntun of Bath in three-quarter dark red morocco gilt over red cloth boards. Spines very slightly faded. A fine set. DB 00024. $13,500 A Very Attractive Publisher’s Binding 147. [WESTALL, Richard, and John Martin, illustrators]. CAUNTER, Hobart. Pictorial Illustrations of the Old and New Testaments…With Descriptions by the Rev. Hobart Caunter, B.D. London: 1838. First edition. Octavo. With 144 woodengraved plates after Richard Westall and John Martin. Publisher’s deluxe binding of black roan. Covers decoratively stamped in blind, spine pictorially stamped and lettered in gilt, all edges gilt. Joints and boards edges a little rubbed. Bookplate neatly removed from front pastedown. Minimal foxing and soiling. An excellent copy in a very attractive publisher’s binding. DB 00715. $1,500 First Edition of “The Sword in the Stone” 148. WHITE, T.H. The Sword in the Stone. London: 1938. First edition of the first volume of T.H. White’s tetralogy based on Arthurian Legend. Octavo. Text illustrations by the author. Original black cloth lettered in white on spine. Minimal rubbing to extremities, two small areas of slight discoloration to cloth on spine, an additional area of discoloration at the upper corner of the rear cover, edges lightly foxed. An excellent copy. In the original black and white pictorial dust jacket (jacket price-clipped and with a few tiny chips or tears , 30 149. WHITMAN, Walt. Leaves of Grass…[Together with:] Complete Prose Works…Boston: Small, Maynard & Company, 1898. Large-paper edition. One of sixty copies for sale in the United States, out of a total edition of ninety copies. Signed by the publishers. Two large octavo volumes. Photogravure frontispiece portrait and five photogravure plates, one facsimile. Bound by Whitman Bennett of New York in full green morocco gilt. Minimal foxing and darkening to edges, tiny faint dampstain in the upper blank corner, most noticeable at the beginning of Leaves of Grass and at the end of Complete Prose Works. Complete Prose Works with one leaf torn across and neatly repaired, just affecting a couple of letters. An excellent copy. Bound in at the front of Leaves of Grass is a leaf of manuscript in Whitman’s hand, a Typed Letter Signed by Edmund C. Stedman, and an Autograph Letter Signed by John Burroughs. Bound in at the front of Complete Prose Works are three Autograph Letters Signed by Edmund Clarence Stedman, two to Mr. John H. Johnston and one to John Swinton. DB 00383. $18,500 One of Only Seventy-Five Copies Signed by Oscar Wilde 150. WILDE, Oscar. The Happy Prince and Other Tales. Illustrated by Walter Crane and Jacomb Hood. London: 1888. First edition. One of seventy-five numbered copies (sixty-five of which are for sale) on large paper, signed by the author and the publisher. Folio. Frontispiece and two plates by Walter Crane, each in two states, one black and one brown, printed on India paper mounted. Six head-pieces, printed in black on India paper mounted, and six tail-pieces by Jacomb Hood. Original Japanese vellum over bevelled boards. Front cover pictorially stamped in black with a design by Jacomb Hood and lettered in red. Spine ruled and lettered in black. Corners very lightly bumped, spine very slightly darkened and with a few tiny water stains, light foxing to endpapers. Still, this is one of the finest copies that we have seen of this title, which is notoriously hard to find in fine condition. Housed in a quarter morocco slipcase. DB 00761. $25,000 Come see us in San Francisco at The 40th California International Antiquarian Book Fair February 16-18, 2007, Concourse Exhibition Center 635 Eighth Street, San Francisco, CA Booth 640 David Brass Rare Books, Inc. 23901 Calabasas Road · Suite 2060 · Calabasas · California · 91302 http://www.davidbrassrarebooks.com · [email protected] Office 818-222-4103 · Fax 818-222-6173 A Pair of Secret Library Doors [SECRET LIBRARY DOORS]. A pair of doors which, when closed, looks just like bookcases filled with leather-bound books, and could conceal a secret room (or two). The doors can be used together or separately. Each door has three four-inch brass hinges and an ornate brass handle. The doors are made of composite wood painted green. They are 2 inches thick, 78 inches tall by 32 3/4 inches wide, and weigh 90 lbs. Each has seven shelves with the spines of actual nineteenth-century leather-bound books attached. The left-hand door has 148 books on the shelves and the righthand door has 143 books. The shelves are 1 inch thick by 31 inches wide, and, from top to bottom, are 8, 8, 9, 10, 10, 11, and 11 inches apart. The bottom shelf sits on a 3 inch plinth. These fine secret library bookcase doors were removed from an English country house where they had resided for many years. Here is a wonderful opportunity to hide your own secret room within your library! DB 00731. $15,000