303 résultats
189875660London:: Leonard Smithers 1898. Second edition. publisher's white and gold cloth gilt-lettered on the spine. Ink ownership name on front free endpaper; endsheets tanned; a very few smudges and spots to text and deckled fore-edges a bit tanned. The original binding is dust-soiled and stained; spine quite tanned; but tight and sound. . 8vo. Leonard Smithers, hardcover
189859504New York:: Brentano's 1898. First US edition first printing. publisher's olive cloth decorated in colors; preserved in a custom quarter morocco folding box. . Cloth lightly rubbed at edges joints and corners; 1899 private library book label on pastedown; but an attractive tight and sound copy. . 12mo. Horodisch pp. 72-75. Brentano's, hardcover
1898259158London 1898. First edition ONE OF 30 COPIES on Japanese vellum. 1 vols. 8vo. Cinnamon-colored cloth vellum spine. Covers show slight insect damage and minor soiling spine a bit soiled otherwise a very good copy in a quarter blue morocco slipcase with chemise and with the bookplate and signature of actress LENA ASHWELL 1872-1957 on the front pastedown. First edition ONE OF 30 COPIES on Japanese vellum. 1 vols. 8vo. First edition of Wilde's legendary poem written while he was imprisoned in its rarest state - being one of only 30 copies printed on Japanese vellum.<br /> <br /> This copy comes from the distinguished library of the actress Lena Ashwell 1872-1957 who as a young actress toured in Wilde's Lady Windermere's Fan in 1891 later becoming actor-manager of the Savoy Theatre. Ashwell was particularly troubled by the news of Wilde's arrest and wrote later: ". the atmosphere of London was horrible and cruel. His plays were so very brilliant and I had seen this when I was in Lady Windermere's so I felt that he was a friend and in desperate trouble." Later during WWI she is known to have pioneered the organization of entertainments on a large scale for the British troops in France Leask Margaret Lena Ashwell: Actress Patriot Pioneer 2012.<br /> <br /> An excellent association copy of an essential Wilde rarity. Mason 372 unknown
1899wld04London: Leonard Smithers. G - in Good condition. Cover lightly marked. Spine darkened. Inner hinges sympathetically reinforced. Light foxing of endpapers. Sm. tear to copyright page and chip to rear pastedown. Untrimmed. 1899. Reprint. Mustard hardback cloth cover with white spine. 230mm x 140mm 9" x 6". 31pp. Early reprint. Publication date February 1898 to copyright page but with addition at this later stage of Wilde's name in square brackets beneath C. 3. 3. . Leonard Smithers hardcover
1898635478Leonard Smithers London 1898. 2nd Edition. Hardcover. Good/No Jacket. 8vo. - Second Edition though lacks the Printed "Second Edition" to the title page verso - Publication date February 1898 to copyright page - Also includes the numerous amendments made to that edition - Oscar Wilde's last work published pseudonymously using his prisoner designation - Quarter bound in white linen over cinnamon linen boards w/ gilt lettering to spine - Printed on handmade paper w/ deckled edges on one side of the page only - Covers heavily tanned and marked - Lettering to spine faded - Corners and spine ends bumped and crushed - Endpapers toned and stained - Content lightly toned and foxed throughout w/ scratches and marks to some leaves particularly near the rear - Rear hinge very slightly open but still strong - Book ow/ solid and clean - 31 pages No Jacket Leonard Smithers, London hardcover
189946752London: Leonard Smithers 1899. Slightly grubby spine title to spine fading pp clean and bright very good. Cloth. Very Good/No Jacket. 8vo. Leonard Smithers Hardcover
18999014015London: Leonard Smithers 1899. Seventh Edition. Hardcover. Good condition. One of 2000 copies. Bound in publisher's original quarter tan and orange cloth with the spine stamped in gilt. Uncut. First edition to use Wilde's name. Last authorized edition issued by Smithers. Binding has seperated at page 1 but still intact. Gift inscription in ink on the front free endpaper. Some minor soiling to the covers. <br/><br/> Leonard Smithers hardcover
1898kb860.331GB: Leonard Smithers 1898. Wilde's name does NOT appear on the title page. Mustard cloth with vellum spine Very clean tight unmarked text with rough cut edges as issued. Endpapers bit browned. Covers sound but cloth a little dust marked and velllum spine a little darkened. Spine title a little dull. Overall Book is in very good or better condition with minor signs of wear and/or age. . 4th Edition. Hardback. VG/No DW. Leonard Smithers Hardcover
189947130London England: Leonard Smithers 1899. Book. Very Good. Hardcover. Seventh Edition. 31 pages 8vo. Scarce. Seventh Edition: this is the first edition to use Oscar Wilde's name on the title page in parenthesis. Mustard cloth boards with cream white spine gold lettering along spine. Shelfwear: light scuffing along edges and cover boards some light smudges on cover boards heavy foxing on free endpapers and inside covers light foxing on page leafs. Tightly bound no marks. Volume is in Very Good condition. Leonard Smithers Hardcover
18992489London: Leonard Smithers and Xo 1899. Cloth. Very Good. Seventh edition printing and first to include Wilde's name on title page. Slim 8vo in 4s pp. viii 31 printed and numbered on recto 2. Original quarter cream cloth spine lettered in gilt fawn cloth boards. Edges untrimmed. Grubby and stained extremities bruised and worn white stains to leading edges. Edges and endpapers toned and scantly foxed. Emmeline Garnett's sober ex libris to ffep plus inscription above in blue ink: "Emmeline Garnett/ July 1946/ St. Leonards". Else clean and bright. A robust copy of the last authorised edition published by Smithers; one of 2000 copies. Very good Composed during Wilde's exile in Bernavel-le-Grand with Robbie Ross following his two-year incarceration for gross indecency under the Labouchere Amendment Act and first published under his prison cell number at Reading 'C.3.3'. The popularity of Wilde's ballad afforded him a small income for the rest of his life having been forced to admit bankruptcy whilst imprisoned. Emmeline Garnett 1924-2022 was a "teacher author and historian par excellence" who wrote extensively about Lancashire including John Marsden's Will: The Hornby Castle Dispute 1780-1840 and Juvenile Offenders in Victorian Lancashire: W. J. Garnett and the Bleasdale Reformatory as well as Florence Nightingale's Nuns. Leonard Smithers and Xo hardcover
1898023269London: Leonard Smithers 1898. Fifth Edition printing So stated behind the title page. Original two toned cream and mustard yellow cloth. Gilt lettering on the spine. Heavily soiled to the cloth. Front free endapge is cleanly excised presumably to remove a previous owner's name. Photos available upon request. Overall in FAIR condition. Full Cloth. Fair. 8vo - over 7¾" - 9¾" tall. Hardcover. Leonard Smithers Hardcover
1898140948944London: Leonard Smithers 1898. Signed Limited Issue. Near Fine. Third edition limited issue #69 of 99 copies signed by Oscar Wilde in black ink on the limitation page. 31 pp. printed on rectos only. Bound in publisher's purple cloth over and white spine cloth stamped in gilt; gilt floral ornament to front board after the famed British artist Charles Ricketts. Housed in a custom quarter morocco slipcase. <p>Near Fine with slight lean to binding light soilingto boards. Bookplate of business man Chauncey Lawrence Williams at front pastedown along with an inscription from the former owner and giftee below dated March 8 1934. Williams was publishing partner of W. Irving Way of Way and Williams who published L. Frank Baum's first literary venture Mother Goose in Prose 1897 Additionally he commissioned a 28-year-old Frank Lloyd Wright to build his home in River Forest Illinois. Williams' funeral service program is laid-in at front offsetting from previously laid-in papers at front endsheets with remnants of former auction record at front free endpaper. <p>Wilde's poignant poem a reflective narrative calling for prison reform and critique of Victorian-era justice systems. Written in exile and printed anonymously under his identification number "C. 3. 3." issued to him at Reading prison during his two year imprisonment for gross indecency with his lover Lord Alfred Douglas.The scarcest and most desirable edition of the author's widely lauded and instantly successful protest poem which serves as a deeply personal lament and a powerful testament to his time in prison. Mason 374. Leonard Smithers unknown
18994645pLeonard Smithers. Good. Paperback. 1899. pp 31 foxing rebound in an old style half binding not retaining the original wrappers<br><p></p> . Leonard Smithers paperback
18985433London: Leonard Smithers 1898. Hardcover. Fair. 8vo. Fourth edition or printing of 1898. Cream linen and mustard coloured cloth boards with gilt lettering to spine which is almost indecipherable. Front board has large damp patch with creasings. Rear board is lightle stained. Edges are bumped. Spine is very faded. Pages are age tanned with occasional foxing. Pages are of laid cream paper and are rough cut. Pages are clean. Previous owner's signature facing the copyright page. Binding is tight. 8vo. One of the limited editions which were published the same year as the original publication by Wilde or C.3.3. 1898 Leonard Smithers hardcover
1898FB417 /4B<p><strong>In the original dust sheet.</strong> Red cloth binding with gilt title.</p> The Richards Press. hardcover
1898b3-C10882Leonard Smithers Royal Arcade London W 1898. fifth edition. Hardcover. Very Good. Yellow cloth Shelf wear shop soiled foxing in text.Carefully wrapped on a protective acetate cover to prevent further damage. Please contact us if you need further information or scans. Leonard Smithers Royal Arcade London W hardcover
1898BN031037London: Leonard Smitheres 1898. First Edition. Hardcover. Very Good. Octavo. Wilde's famous long verse on his imprisonment for homosexuality. The title page bears his authorship as "C.3.3. Oscar Wilde" and the Roman numerals "Mdcccxcix" with no printing number indicated. This last edition authorized by Wilde for Smithers to print was dated 1899 as this one is. According to Wilde's bibliographer the seventh printing issued in an edition of 2000 copies was the first to use Wilde's full name on the title page. One of the classics of Nineties British literature. Octavo quarter white cloth over mustard-colored boards 31 pages plus blank material. Sporadic and very slight shelf dust offsetting to boards else a very good unmarked copy internally fine. Extremely scarce. Leonard Smitheres hardcover
18983101London: Leonard Smithers 1898. Hardcover. Good. 8vo - over 7¾" - 9¾" tall. Fourth edition or printing of 1898. Cream linen and mustard coloured cloth boards with gilt lettering to spine. Front board has black markings and is discoloured. Edges are bumped. Spine is faded with a rubbed patch. Pages are age tanned with occasional foxing. Pages are rough cut. Some page discolouration throughout. Some verses have been ticked in pencil. One of the limited editions which were published the same year as the original publication by Wilde or C.3.3. Previous owner's signature on frontispiece dated 1898 and the bookplate of Brighton College on fep. Binding is tight. 1898 Leonard Smithers hardcover
1898002660London: Leonard Smithers 1898. Book. Very Good. Hardcover. Cream linen and mustard colored cloth boards. Spine lettered in gilt. Sixth edition and the last edition to be published under the pseudonym C.3.3. block C landing 3 cell 3. This sixth edition was printed on handmade paper in 1000 copies on 21st of May 1898. Stain on frontcover endpages with offsetting. Spine darkened. No bookplates marks or inscriptions. 31 pp. 23 x 145 cm. . Leonard Smithers Hardcover
18993398<p>Hardcover. Condition. Very Good-. Unauthorized or pirated edition by the printer of the original first edition . The last edition that was authorized by Wilde for Smithers to print was dated 1899 later unauthorized editions also show that date. Probably printed in 1904 based on 1904 gift inscription on FFEP. Soiling to boards. Backstrip of spine has tears along the hinges particularly at the bottom. Binding is nonetheless firm. Clean interior with light offsetting to pastedowns.</p> Leonard Smithers hardcover
18986<p><strong>Oscar Wilde</strong></p><p><strong>The Ballad of Reading Goal by C.3.3.</strong></p><p><em>Leonard Smithers Royal Arcade London W. 1898.</em></p><p>Original white quarter cloth spine lettered in gilt yellow cloth sides.</p><p>Inscribed in ink on the back of the half-title:</p><p><em>To Louis Fabulet</em></p><p><em>from the author</em></p><p><em>in remembrance of</em></p><p><em>a charming evening</em></p><p><em>when the wine was </em></p><p><em>red and the moon</em></p><p><em>was silver</em></p><p><em>Oscar Wilde</em></p><p><em>Paris</em></p><p><em>98</em></p><p>Autograph note from Louis Fabulet:<em><br /><br />"This book: "The Ballad of Reading Jail" was given to me by Oscar Wilde in June 1898 a few days after the dinner that after his release from prison in England I persuaded my friend the poet Edouard Ducôté then director of the magazine "L'Ermitage" to offer in his honor.<br />Hugues Rebell André Gide Henri Ghéon René Boylesve and I were the guests.<br />Louis Fabulet.<br /><br /></em>Attached is the business card bearing the name under which Oscar Wilde then lived in Paris. The address in pencil: <em>"Hôtel d'Alsace rue des Beaux-Arts is in his handwriting.<br /></em></p><p>"<em>Melmoth" is the man "who sold his soul for eternal youth."</em></p><p>Louis Fabulet 1862-1933 was one of the main translators from English to French in his time notably of the works of Kipling and Thoreau. It is said that it was Oscar Wilde who introduced him to <em>The Jungle Book.</em></p><p>This inscription exceptionally long and colorful which is almost akin to a brief poem refers to the dinner that Louis Fabulet speaks of in his note.</p><p>Wilde had arrived in Paris in March and the French literati were keen to pay him public homage with this banquet which he presided over.</p><p>The inscription makes a nice reference to the event with perhaps a reminiscence of the <em>Ballad</em> itself where we read in the second verse: <em>"For blood and wine are red"</em> .</p><p>Mounted in the copy is Wilde's rare card in the name of Sebastian Melmoth. The aged ruined writer abandoned by almost everyone hid himself under the name of the hero of Robert Mathurin's novel <em>Melmoth the Wanderer.</em></p><p>The card does not have an address. Wilde in fact lived at the Hôtel d'Alsace in Saint-Germain des Prés a shabby establishment at the time <em>"it's so dirty so totally depressing and hopeless"</em> he wrote. He wrote down the address of his hand in pencil. It was there that he died two years later. The hotel took the name "L'Hôtel" in 1963 and became a rather chic place.</p><p>These combined elements: the poetic inscription which evokes a happy moment and the moving card which evokes his misery make this copy one of the most precious there is.</p> Leonard Smithers
1899WILDEOSC015579Leonard Smithers London. 1899. Seventh and last authorised edition; also the first to have the author's name on the title-page. Octavo. 31 leaves printed on rectos only. Two-tone buckram covers.Some light foxing to prelims. Small bump to top edge of rear cover. Covers a little marked. Very good. Leonard Smithers, London. hardcover
1898180349London: Leonard Smithers 1898. Unusual in a fine contemporary binding First edition one of 800 copies printed on handmade paper. This copy is beautifully presented and includes the well-preserved wrappers at the rear. At the insistence of his publishers Wilde employed a pseudonym for fear of the negative effect his name would have on the poem's sales. "C.3.3." derives from Wilde's cell in Reading Gaol - the third cell on the third landing of Gallery C. The first edition of which another 30 copies on japon were also issued sold out rapidly. A second edition was printed within weeks. Octavo 220 x 135 mm. Contemporary brown crushed morocco by Rivière spine lettered in gilt with raised bands compartments tooled with floral design French fillet to boards gilt inner dentelles dark green coated endpapers top edge gilt fore and bottom edges uncut original wrappers bound in. Label sometime removed from front pastedown rear blanks lightly toned from wrappers. A fine copy. Mason 371. hardcover
189917881The Ballad of Reading Gaol Leonard Smithers 1899 the 7th edition with several important changes to previous editions 1 the name Oscar Wilde appears on the title page 2 The copyright date is changed from January 1898 to February 1898 and 3 a line of the poem on page 4 third stanza has been changed. A very good copy void of foxing or staining with a tanned and dust-soiled spine. Leonard Smithers unknown
1898181423London: Leonard Smithers 1898. The rare deluxe issue elegantly bound First edition number 17 of 30 copies printed on japon presented here in a restrained contemporary morocco binding. The limitation is handwritten in purple ink by Leonard Smithers. A further 800 copies on handmade paper were published simultaneously. Wilde wrote the poem while exiled in France and published it under the pseudonym "C.3.3." after his cell in Reading Gaol the third cell on the third landing of Gallery C. The first edition sold out rapidly and a second edition was issued within weeks. Octavo 220 x 145 mm. Contemporary purple morocco spine lettered and decorated with leaf tools in gilt "W" monogram enclosed in laurel wreath to front cover in gilt blind rules to covers turn-ins gilt original vellum spine bound in at rear. Housed in a purple flat-back cloth box by the Chelsea Bindery. Book label of J. O. Edwards to front free endpaper. Joints repaired a handsome copy. Mason 372. hardcover