Auktionsarchiv: Los-Nr. 124

Dickens, CharlesAmerican Notes for

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Auktionsarchiv: Los-Nr. 124

Dickens, CharlesAmerican Notes for

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Dickens, CharlesAmerican Notes for General Circulation. London: Chapman and Hall, 1842
2 volumes, 8vo (197 x 126 mm). Half-titles, advertisement leaf at front of vol. I, 6pp. advertisements at end of vol. II, inscribed and signed by Dickens on the half-title of vol. I; a few stray spots, some very minor browning. Publisher's reddish-brown cloth, decoratively stamped in blind, spine gilt-lettered, yellow endpapers; cloth slightly sunned, minor wear to joints and spine ends, particularly to vol. II, minor instance of dampstaining to lower board of vol. II. In custom box. 
First edition, first issue (with verso of the contents leaf incorrectly numbered "xvi"), in the primary binding.
An extraordinary presentation copy, inscribed to "Daniel Maclise From his friend Charles Dickens Eighteenth October 1842" one day prior to publication. 
Daniel Maclise was an Irish painter and illustrator who worked for most of his life in London. From a young age, Maclise had great expectations, and aspired to be a professional artist. His father, however, placed him in employment at the age of 14, at Newenham's Bank in Cork. In 1825, Maclise happened to see Sir Walter Scott who was traveling through Ireland, and made a quick sketch of the literary giant. This was afterwards lithographed, and became quite popular, leading to a number of commissions. He exhibited at the Royal Academy for the first time in 1829, and following this, Maclise focused his work more exclusively on historical pictures and occasionally portraits. Maclise painted Dickens around the time the latter began serializing Nicholas Nickleby, and again in 1839 (National Portrait Gallery 1172). By all accounts, the 1839 portrait was astonishingly like the author, and it remains the most convincing image of the young Dickens, as well as one of Maclise's most accomplished works. Of it, William Makepeace Thackeray wrote: "as a likeness perfectly amazing; a looking-glass could not render a better facsimile. Here we have the real identical man Dickens: the artist must have understood the inward Boz as well as the outward before he made this admirable representation of him" (Fraser's Magazine, 1840, XXII:113).
Maclise was one of the first of his closest friends that Dickens went to visit after returning from his tiring and disillusioning trip to the United States in 1842. After an enthusiastic greeting from his children, Dickens dashed off to see William Macready, then quickly to John Forster. Forster—also a close friend of Maclise—was dining out, but he "guessed at once what [his interruption] was when Dickens drove there and sent up word that a gentleman wished to speak to him. Forster came flying out of the house, leaped into the carriage, and began to cry, and did not remember until they had driven several miles on their way to see Maclise that he had left his hat behind him" (Johnson, Charles Dickens 1952, p.428).
A reunion dinner the following week included Maclise as one of the featured guests, along with Forster, Macready, Cruikshank, and Cattermole. Around this same time, Maclise was completing portraits of Dickens's children. After the reunions subsided, Dickens began work on American Notes, and important source material was returned to Dickens for his use. "He borrowed from Forster, Maclise, Beard, Mitton and Fontblanque the letters that he had written them during his journey, to supplement the journal with their mass of details and profit from their spontaneity of observation" (ibid., pp.429-30). Later that summer, a visit from William Wadsworth Longfellow inspired Dickens to lead the American author on a tour of London's lurid slums. The two were accompanied by Forster and Maclise (and two police officers). Maclise was appalled by the conditions at the Mint lodginghouses, unable to subject himself to the conditions within. Several months later, American Notes was published, and this copy was inscribed for Maclise the day before its official publication.
In American Notes, Dickens expressed his love of Boston, but was critical of the sanitary conditions of American cities generally. Indeed, the further south Dickens travelled, the more disturbed he became. Much of his dissatisfaction would be conveyed through Martin Chuzzlewit (1844), in which the eponymous hero is swindled in a land settlement called Eden. 
REFERENCE:Eckel 108-09; Smith II:3; Yale/Gimbel A66
PROVENANCE:Daniel Maclise (presentation inscription from the author on half-title of Vol. I) — Kenyon Starling (bookplate to box) — William E. Self (The William E. Self Family Collection, Christie's New York, 2 April 2008, lot 84)  Condition reportCondition as described in catalogue entry.
The lot is sold in the condition it is in at the time of sale. The condition report is provided to assist you with assessing the condition of the lot and is for guidance only. Any reference to condition in the condition report for the lot does not amount to a full description of condition. The images of the lot form part of the condition report for the lot. Certain images of the lot provided online may not accurately reflect the actual condition of the lot. In particular, the online images may represent colors and shades which are different to the lot's actual color and shades. The condition report for the lot may make reference to particular imperfections of the lot but you should note that the lot may have other faults not expressly referred to in the condition report for the lot or shown in the online images of the lot. The condition report may not refer to all faults, restoration, alteration or adaptation. The condition report is a statement of opinion only. For that reason, the condition report is not an alternative to taking your own professional advice regarding the condition of the lot. NOTWITHSTANDING THIS ONLINE CONDITION REPORT OR ANY DISCUSSIONS CONCERNING A LOT, ALL LOTS ARE OFFERED AND SOLD "AS IS" IN ACCORDANCE WITH THE CONDITIONS OF SALE/BUSINESS APPLICABLE TO THE RESPECTIVE SALE.

Auktionsarchiv: Los-Nr. 124
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Dickens, CharlesAmerican Notes for General Circulation. London: Chapman and Hall, 1842
2 volumes, 8vo (197 x 126 mm). Half-titles, advertisement leaf at front of vol. I, 6pp. advertisements at end of vol. II, inscribed and signed by Dickens on the half-title of vol. I; a few stray spots, some very minor browning. Publisher's reddish-brown cloth, decoratively stamped in blind, spine gilt-lettered, yellow endpapers; cloth slightly sunned, minor wear to joints and spine ends, particularly to vol. II, minor instance of dampstaining to lower board of vol. II. In custom box. 
First edition, first issue (with verso of the contents leaf incorrectly numbered "xvi"), in the primary binding.
An extraordinary presentation copy, inscribed to "Daniel Maclise From his friend Charles Dickens Eighteenth October 1842" one day prior to publication. 
Daniel Maclise was an Irish painter and illustrator who worked for most of his life in London. From a young age, Maclise had great expectations, and aspired to be a professional artist. His father, however, placed him in employment at the age of 14, at Newenham's Bank in Cork. In 1825, Maclise happened to see Sir Walter Scott who was traveling through Ireland, and made a quick sketch of the literary giant. This was afterwards lithographed, and became quite popular, leading to a number of commissions. He exhibited at the Royal Academy for the first time in 1829, and following this, Maclise focused his work more exclusively on historical pictures and occasionally portraits. Maclise painted Dickens around the time the latter began serializing Nicholas Nickleby, and again in 1839 (National Portrait Gallery 1172). By all accounts, the 1839 portrait was astonishingly like the author, and it remains the most convincing image of the young Dickens, as well as one of Maclise's most accomplished works. Of it, William Makepeace Thackeray wrote: "as a likeness perfectly amazing; a looking-glass could not render a better facsimile. Here we have the real identical man Dickens: the artist must have understood the inward Boz as well as the outward before he made this admirable representation of him" (Fraser's Magazine, 1840, XXII:113).
Maclise was one of the first of his closest friends that Dickens went to visit after returning from his tiring and disillusioning trip to the United States in 1842. After an enthusiastic greeting from his children, Dickens dashed off to see William Macready, then quickly to John Forster. Forster—also a close friend of Maclise—was dining out, but he "guessed at once what [his interruption] was when Dickens drove there and sent up word that a gentleman wished to speak to him. Forster came flying out of the house, leaped into the carriage, and began to cry, and did not remember until they had driven several miles on their way to see Maclise that he had left his hat behind him" (Johnson, Charles Dickens 1952, p.428).
A reunion dinner the following week included Maclise as one of the featured guests, along with Forster, Macready, Cruikshank, and Cattermole. Around this same time, Maclise was completing portraits of Dickens's children. After the reunions subsided, Dickens began work on American Notes, and important source material was returned to Dickens for his use. "He borrowed from Forster, Maclise, Beard, Mitton and Fontblanque the letters that he had written them during his journey, to supplement the journal with their mass of details and profit from their spontaneity of observation" (ibid., pp.429-30). Later that summer, a visit from William Wadsworth Longfellow inspired Dickens to lead the American author on a tour of London's lurid slums. The two were accompanied by Forster and Maclise (and two police officers). Maclise was appalled by the conditions at the Mint lodginghouses, unable to subject himself to the conditions within. Several months later, American Notes was published, and this copy was inscribed for Maclise the day before its official publication.
In American Notes, Dickens expressed his love of Boston, but was critical of the sanitary conditions of American cities generally. Indeed, the further south Dickens travelled, the more disturbed he became. Much of his dissatisfaction would be conveyed through Martin Chuzzlewit (1844), in which the eponymous hero is swindled in a land settlement called Eden. 
REFERENCE:Eckel 108-09; Smith II:3; Yale/Gimbel A66
PROVENANCE:Daniel Maclise (presentation inscription from the author on half-title of Vol. I) — Kenyon Starling (bookplate to box) — William E. Self (The William E. Self Family Collection, Christie's New York, 2 April 2008, lot 84)  Condition reportCondition as described in catalogue entry.
The lot is sold in the condition it is in at the time of sale. The condition report is provided to assist you with assessing the condition of the lot and is for guidance only. Any reference to condition in the condition report for the lot does not amount to a full description of condition. The images of the lot form part of the condition report for the lot. Certain images of the lot provided online may not accurately reflect the actual condition of the lot. In particular, the online images may represent colors and shades which are different to the lot's actual color and shades. The condition report for the lot may make reference to particular imperfections of the lot but you should note that the lot may have other faults not expressly referred to in the condition report for the lot or shown in the online images of the lot. The condition report may not refer to all faults, restoration, alteration or adaptation. The condition report is a statement of opinion only. For that reason, the condition report is not an alternative to taking your own professional advice regarding the condition of the lot. NOTWITHSTANDING THIS ONLINE CONDITION REPORT OR ANY DISCUSSIONS CONCERNING A LOT, ALL LOTS ARE OFFERED AND SOLD "AS IS" IN ACCORDANCE WITH THE CONDITIONS OF SALE/BUSINESS APPLICABLE TO THE RESPECTIVE SALE.

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