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The Colossus. Poems

The Colossus. Poems by PLATH, Sylvia

7 to 14 days for delivery
Standard Shipping: $10.00
Details
$45,000.00
( US$)
Seller: James S. Jaffe Rare Books LLC
Title
The Colossus. Poems
Author
PLATH, Sylvia
Seller
James S. Jaffe Rare Books LLC (United States)
Condition
Signs of use, but a very good copy in worn and soiled dust jacket
Description
London: Heinemann, (1960). First edition of Plath's first regularly published book. Presentation copy, inscribed by Plath on the front free endpaper: "For Luke & Cynthia / with love - / Sylvia / April 13, 1961." A highly important association copy, rich in personal interest and history: E. Lucas (Luke) Myers, an aspiring writer from Tennessee, was intimately connected to Ted Hughes and Plath. Plath met Luke Myers at Cambridge, where she and Myers were studying, and admired his poetry and fiction. In her journal entry for February 25, 1956, she wrote: "I have learned something from E. Lucas Meyers (sic) although he does not know me and will never know I've learned it. His poetry is great, big, moving through technique and discipline to master it and bend it supple to his will. There is a brilliant joy, there, too, almost of an athlete, running, using all the divine flexions of his muscles in the act. Luke writes alone, much. He is serious about it; he does not talk much about it. This is the way." - Sylvia Plath, The Journals (London: Faber & Faber, 2000), p. 207. On March 3, Plath commented on Myers' fiction: "A chapter - story from Luke's novel arrived, badly typed, no margins, scrawled corrections, & badly proofread. But the droll humor, the atmosphere of London & country which seeps indefinably in through the indirect statement: all this is delicate & fine. The incidents & intrigues are something I could never dream up . . . Nothing so dull & obvious & central as love or sex or hate: but deft, oblique. As always, coming unexpectedly upon the good work of a friend or acquaintance, I itch to emulate, to sequester." - Plath, The Journals, p. 344. Luke Myers was a close friend of Ted Hughes, and it was outside the chicken coop behind the rectory of St. Botolph's Church that Myers rented from Mrs. Helen Hitchcock, the widow of a former rector, that Hughes used to pitch his tent on weekend visits to Cambridge University, from which he had graduated a year and a half before. St. Botolph's rectory "was a poets' haven, anarchic and unjudgmental", with Mrs. Hitchcock "turning a blind eye to the capers, bibilous and otherwise, of her undergraduate lodgers, of whom she was very fond." - Anne Stevenson, Bitter Fame: A Life of Sylvia Plath (London: Viking Penguin, 1989), p. 73. In February, 1956, a group of young Cambridge poets including Luke Myers, Ted Hughes, Daniel Huws and David Ross, among others, had just put together a little magazine appropriately named the St. Botolph's Review after Luke Myers' digs where they often gathered, and the launch party for the magazine (of which only one issue was published) was to be the occasion for the first fateful meeting between Plath and Hughes on Saturday, February 25, 1956. Plath, who had read some of the poetry by the St. Botolph's group - and two of whose own poems had been criticized recently by one of them, Daniel Huws, in the student magazine Chequer - purchased a copy of the Review on the morning of the party, and memorized several of Hughes's poems in anticipation of attending the party and meeting him. According to Plath's journal entry, after dancing for a while with a drunken, "satanic" Luke Myers, she ran into Hughes. Amid the crush of the party, "I started yelling again about his poems and quoting: 'most dear unscratchable diamond' and he yelled back, colossal, in a voice that should have come from a Pole, 'You like?' and asking me if I wanted brandy, and me yelling yes and backing into the next room . . . And then it came to the fact that I was all there, wasn't I, and I stamped and screamed yes, . . . and I was stamping and he was stamping on the floor, and then he kissed me bang smash on the mouth and ripped my hair band off, my lovely red hairband scarf which has weathered the sun and much love, and whose like I shall never again find, and my favorite silver earrings: hah, I shall keep, he barked. And when he kissed my neck I bit him long and hard on the cheek, and when we came out of the room, blood was running down his face." - Sylvia Plath, The Journals, pp. 211-212. As Diane Middlebrook put it: "Ted Hughes may not have been looking for a wife that night, but Sylvia Plath was looking for a husband, and Ted Hughes met her specifications exactly." - Diane Middlebrook, Her Husband: Hughes and Plath - A Marriage (London: Viking, 2003), p. 5. A month later in London, Hughes, not wanting "to declare his interest . . . asked Lucas Myers to play go-between. Myers could meet Plath for a drink somewhere, then just drop in on Hughes at the flat on Rugby Street, as if by chance. Myers admits in his memoir that he had taken a dislike to Plath, and that he agreed to this ploy reluctantly. He duly invited Plath to join him and Michael Boddy, another of Hughes's friends, at a pub called the Lamb, in Conduit Street - a poets' hangout - and shortly afterward suggested a visit to Hughes. It didn't take long to see that Hughes and Plath wanted to be alone." Later that night, at Plath's hotel, they spent - in Plath's words - a "sleepless holocaust night" together. - Middlebrook, p. 24. Soon after, Hughes left the job he had in London and moved to Cambridge, sharing a flat with Myers in Tenison Road, meeting Plath every day, and abruptly marrying her on Bloomsday, June 16, 1956 - secretly, with Plath's mother, Aurelia, the only family member at the wedding. In later years, Myers was witness to the difficulties in the marriage, and aware of its tenuous nature. In a measured attempt to explain "Sylvia's behavior and volte-faces between pleasantness and bitchiness" to Olwyn Hughes in a letter dated March 12, 1960, Myers wrote: "I have the feeling that it is best to think of Sylvia as being always pretty much as she was this weekend . . . Ted suffers a good deal more than he would ever indicate or admit, but he also loves her and I think it is best to assume he will stay with her. And she very evidently loves him in the self-interested and possessive way of which she is capable." [quoted by Stevenson, pp. 188-189] For her part, Plath clearly valued her own, and Ted Hughes's, friendship with Luke Myers. In 1961, anticipating the publication of her novel The Bell Jar, "Sylvia must have decided to protect herself, in view of the novel's public portrayal of her mother and of a devastating period in her own personal history, by publishing it under a pseudonym, Victoria Lucas. It was a name drawn from Ted's world: 'Victoria' after his favorite Yorkshire cousin, Victoria (Vicky) Farrar, and 'Lucas' after his friend Lucas Myers." - Stevenson, p. 227. Plath committed suicide at the age of 31 in February 1963. It is perhaps worth noting that the date of Plath's inscription to Lucas and Cynthia Myers is exactly the same as that of the inscription in the copy of The Colossus that Plath gave to the poet Theodore Roethke. Signs of use, but a very good copy in worn and soiled dust jacket. Signs of use, but a very good copy in worn and soiled dust jacket. 8vo, original green cloth, dust jacket. Signs of use, but a very good copy in worn and soiled dust jacket.
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Lord John Signatures by KING Stephen

7 to 14 days for delivery
Standard Shipping: $15.00
Details
$1,100.00
( US$)
Seller: Bauman Rare Books
Title
Lord John Signatures
Author
KING Stephen
Seller
Bauman Rare Books (United States)
Description
1991. First Edition. Signed. KING, Stephen. Lord John Signatures. Northridge, California: Lord John Press, 1991. Oblong octavo, original dark blue cloth gilt, autograph-print endpapers. $1100.First edition of an unusual autograph book, number 275 of 400 copies, signed by Stephen King and dozens of popular writers.This compilation of authors' photographs accompanied by their original signatures is signed by Norman Mailer, Eudora Welty, John Updike, Gerald Ford, Ursula K. Le Guin, Ray Bradbury and John Barth, among many others. It opens with an intriguing essay on collecting autographs and authorial memorabilia written by Stephen King (and signed by him) and, following the section of author's autographs, closes with a section of facsimiles of autographs and autographed objects from noted literati, presidents, and others—including a reproduction of a page from King's manuscript for the story ""Secret Window, Secret Garden."" The William Everson and Richard Yates signatures are in facsimile, as in all copies. Brooks C288.1. Without publisher's slipcase. Contents and binding in fine condition.
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Sheny-ta. Medecine Egyptienne en Crete Minoenne a l'epoque paleopalatiale. by AUSSANT, Pierre Edouard.

7 to 15 days for delivery
Standard Shipping: $40.00
Details
$35.00
( EU VAT US$0)
Seller: Jeff Weber Rare Books
Title
Sheny-ta. Medecine Egyptienne en Crete Minoenne a l'epoque paleopalatiale.
Author
AUSSANT, Pierre Edouard.
Seller
Jeff Weber Rare Books (Switzerland)
Description
Paris:: Librairie Orientaliste Paul Geuthner, 1969., 1969. 270 x 210 mm. 4to. 19, N4, B13, C1 pp. 1 map, 6 figs., 26 plates, bibliog. Pictorial wrappers. Ownership rubber stamp on title. Very good.
Ring Round the Moon: A Charade with Music

Ring Round the Moon: A Charade with Music by Anouilh, Jean (translated by Christopher Fry)

7 to 14 days for delivery
Standard Shipping: FREE
Details
$20.00
( EU VAT US$0)
Seller: ReadInk
Title
Ring Round the Moon: A Charade with Music
Author
Anouilh, Jean (translated by Christopher Fry)
Seller
ReadInk (United States)
Condition
Near Fine in Very Good+ dj
Description
New York: Oxford University Press. Near Fine in Very Good+ dj. 1950. First American Edition. Hardcover. [light shelfwear, a touch of soiling to top of text block; jacket slightly dog-eared at top of spine, horizontal wrinkle along top edge of front panel]. Preface by Peter Brook, who directed the original London production at the Globe Theatre. The original French title was "L'Invitation au Chateau." .