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Auktionsarchiv: Los-Nr. 220•

COLLECTION – LITERATURE

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Zuschlagspreis:
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ca. 3.952 $
Auktionsarchiv: Los-Nr. 220•

COLLECTION – LITERATURE

Schätzpreis
0 £
Zuschlagspreis:
2.500 £
ca. 3.952 $
Beschreibung:

Album comprising autograph letters etc., mainly by literary and journalistic figures of the Victoria era, addressed to the publishers Taylor & Hessey, Edward Chapman Richard Bentley Longman's and John Murray and to Frederick Tennyson (poet and brother of Alfred), the antiquary John Britton the novelist Charlotte M. Yonge, the Blackburn dialect poet John Thomas Baron, the biographical journalist-historian Edward Walford, the maverick defender of the Tichborne Claimant Edward Kenealy, and others; the collection including letters, manuscripts etc by Louisa May Alcott (autograph quotation from Hospital Sketches, signed overleaf: "look well after the cheerfulnesses of life & leave the dismals to shift for themselves..."), Charles Dickens (envelope front signed, to his friend Henry Bicknell, originally enclosing his letter of 28 November 1850 and date-stamped the following day), George MacDonald, A.W. Kinglake (fine letter meditating on creative power and the English language), Samuel Smiles (13 April 1868, promising to send proofs [possibly of the revised biography of George Stephenson published that year that included a biography of Robert]), Jerome K. Jerome ("...Oh the joy of being understood..."), Frederick Tennyson (fine long letter expounding his Swedenborgian beliefs and a letter about his brother's handwriting: "I came unexpectedly across an old letter dated 1882 – which I had long suspected to be somewhere latent – from my brother Alfred...My brother's sight has been bad for some time and now he seems to write almost an undecipherable hand – very different from the clear – almost legal character which in days of youth used to be his"), Byron's friend the Classical scholar and bibliophile Henry Drury of Harrow (to Longman's, ordering books: "If any of the printed books are stained, wormed or written in, I will trouble you not to send them. I am indifferent to their Exterior"), Byron's friend the Classical scholar and translator Francis Hodgson of Eton (to John Taylor of Taylor & Hessey, pestering him about advertising for "my little book", 1820), Edward Bulwer Lytton ("...Art & letters are a Republic but not a democratic republic/ they are Essentially Aristocratic..."), Rider Haggard, Robert Southey (autograph envelope to Archdeacon Wrangham, with accompanying letter by his son Charles), E. Cobham Brewer of Dictionary of Phrase and Fable fame (rare letter, referring to his Reader's Handbook), Robert Chambers (publisher and author of Vestiges of Creation), the missionary and father-in-law of Livingstone Robert Moffat, the phrenologist George Combe, Cyril Jackson Dean of Christ Church (prescient letter written the day after Austerlitz and advocating a naval pension as a memorial for Nelson), Mary Cowden Clarke (two letters, one offering Edward Chapman on 10 October 1850 "a new work in hand, somewhat original in its plan" [Chapman & Hall were to publish the first volume of The Girlhood of Shakespeare's Heroines that year]), Thomas Barnes of the Times, Marquis Spineto (about his lectures on The Elements of Hieroglyphics and Egyptian Antiquities, 1836), M.E. Braddon (letter on her behalf by her 'bigamous' husband John Maxwell with a printed list of her novels headed by Lady Audley's Secret), the hymn-writer John Monsell, D.M. Moir of Blackwood's, Christabel Coleridge (poet and daughter of Derwent, manuscript of her poem "The Queen and the Robber 1464" in nineteen quatrains, signed), B.W. Procter ('Barry Cornwall'), George Godwin A.H. Layard, William Jerdan, S.C. Hall, George Grove, Theodore Martin (referring to his life of Albert), Henry Hallam, Edward A. Freeman, Sir David Brewster Harriet Martineau, Edmund Yates, Leslie Stephen, Sir James Mackintosh, Elizabeth Missing Sewell, Flinders Petrie, Henry Arthur Jones (on his next play), the war correspondent W.H. Russell (2), 'Hesba Stetton' ("...The first story I wrote was published by Charles Dickens .."), John Murray II, the geologist William Ainsworth John Stuart Blackie,

Auktionsarchiv: Los-Nr. 220•
Auktion:
Datum:
22.11.2011
Auktionshaus:
Bonhams London
London, New Bond Street 101 New Bond Street London W1S 1SR Tel: +44 20 7447 7447 Fax : +44 207 447 7401 info@bonhams.com
Beschreibung:

Album comprising autograph letters etc., mainly by literary and journalistic figures of the Victoria era, addressed to the publishers Taylor & Hessey, Edward Chapman Richard Bentley Longman's and John Murray and to Frederick Tennyson (poet and brother of Alfred), the antiquary John Britton the novelist Charlotte M. Yonge, the Blackburn dialect poet John Thomas Baron, the biographical journalist-historian Edward Walford, the maverick defender of the Tichborne Claimant Edward Kenealy, and others; the collection including letters, manuscripts etc by Louisa May Alcott (autograph quotation from Hospital Sketches, signed overleaf: "look well after the cheerfulnesses of life & leave the dismals to shift for themselves..."), Charles Dickens (envelope front signed, to his friend Henry Bicknell, originally enclosing his letter of 28 November 1850 and date-stamped the following day), George MacDonald, A.W. Kinglake (fine letter meditating on creative power and the English language), Samuel Smiles (13 April 1868, promising to send proofs [possibly of the revised biography of George Stephenson published that year that included a biography of Robert]), Jerome K. Jerome ("...Oh the joy of being understood..."), Frederick Tennyson (fine long letter expounding his Swedenborgian beliefs and a letter about his brother's handwriting: "I came unexpectedly across an old letter dated 1882 – which I had long suspected to be somewhere latent – from my brother Alfred...My brother's sight has been bad for some time and now he seems to write almost an undecipherable hand – very different from the clear – almost legal character which in days of youth used to be his"), Byron's friend the Classical scholar and bibliophile Henry Drury of Harrow (to Longman's, ordering books: "If any of the printed books are stained, wormed or written in, I will trouble you not to send them. I am indifferent to their Exterior"), Byron's friend the Classical scholar and translator Francis Hodgson of Eton (to John Taylor of Taylor & Hessey, pestering him about advertising for "my little book", 1820), Edward Bulwer Lytton ("...Art & letters are a Republic but not a democratic republic/ they are Essentially Aristocratic..."), Rider Haggard, Robert Southey (autograph envelope to Archdeacon Wrangham, with accompanying letter by his son Charles), E. Cobham Brewer of Dictionary of Phrase and Fable fame (rare letter, referring to his Reader's Handbook), Robert Chambers (publisher and author of Vestiges of Creation), the missionary and father-in-law of Livingstone Robert Moffat, the phrenologist George Combe, Cyril Jackson Dean of Christ Church (prescient letter written the day after Austerlitz and advocating a naval pension as a memorial for Nelson), Mary Cowden Clarke (two letters, one offering Edward Chapman on 10 October 1850 "a new work in hand, somewhat original in its plan" [Chapman & Hall were to publish the first volume of The Girlhood of Shakespeare's Heroines that year]), Thomas Barnes of the Times, Marquis Spineto (about his lectures on The Elements of Hieroglyphics and Egyptian Antiquities, 1836), M.E. Braddon (letter on her behalf by her 'bigamous' husband John Maxwell with a printed list of her novels headed by Lady Audley's Secret), the hymn-writer John Monsell, D.M. Moir of Blackwood's, Christabel Coleridge (poet and daughter of Derwent, manuscript of her poem "The Queen and the Robber 1464" in nineteen quatrains, signed), B.W. Procter ('Barry Cornwall'), George Godwin A.H. Layard, William Jerdan, S.C. Hall, George Grove, Theodore Martin (referring to his life of Albert), Henry Hallam, Edward A. Freeman, Sir David Brewster Harriet Martineau, Edmund Yates, Leslie Stephen, Sir James Mackintosh, Elizabeth Missing Sewell, Flinders Petrie, Henry Arthur Jones (on his next play), the war correspondent W.H. Russell (2), 'Hesba Stetton' ("...The first story I wrote was published by Charles Dickens .."), John Murray II, the geologist William Ainsworth John Stuart Blackie,

Auktionsarchiv: Los-Nr. 220•
Auktion:
Datum:
22.11.2011
Auktionshaus:
Bonhams London
London, New Bond Street 101 New Bond Street London W1S 1SR Tel: +44 20 7447 7447 Fax : +44 207 447 7401 info@bonhams.com
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