Thursday, June 06, 2013

Antiquarian Book News including a handwritten note from missionary William Colenso


William Leaves Note

A handwritten note from missionary William Colenso has been found at Massey University inside a copy of the first book published in New Zealand. The discovery was made by associate university librarian John Charles at the Manawatu campus library this week.

The volume he found comprises two separate works bound together: the Maori language translations of the Gospel of St Luke, and the Epistles to the Ephesians and Philippians. The latter, printed on February 17, 1835, was the first book printed in New Zealan
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The Library of a Distinguished American Book Collector

Yesterday at Sotheby’s New York, The Library of a Distinguished American Book Collector sold for $4,891,634 within pre-sale estimates, led by seven books from Washington’s Mount Vernon Library, all with his bold signature on their title pages and his bookplate which achieved $1,205,000 (est. $1/1.5 million). This is the largest group of books from Washington’s library to appear in a single auction since the Bishop John Fletcher Hurst sale in 1904 and features novels such as Jonathan Swift’s The Beauties of Swift, Alain Rene Le Sage’s The Adventures of Gil Blas of Santillane. Vol. 3.  and Joseph Priestley’s Discourses Relating to the Evidences of Revealed Religion.

Shattering the previous auction record for Thomas Paine’s iconic 1776 pamphlet, Common Sense, an extraordinary association copy of the rare first edition brought $545,000 with a pre-sale estimate of $400,000 to $600,000. A first edition of Charles Darwin’s On the Origin of Species by Means of Natural Selection, of the Preservation of Favoured Races in the Struggle for Life exceeded pre-sale estimates of $100,000 to $150,000, fetching $209,000. 
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British Horological Institute

The British Horological Institute at Upton Hall, Upton, Newark Notts NG23 5TE, will be holding their Summer Show from Friday June 14th to Sunday June 16th inclusive. For those interested in horological books, the Library will be open, and there will be a wide variety of horological books for sale.

Refreshments will be available, and there will also be a wide variety of antique clocks and watches on display. The Hall is a listed building.

Further information available from Jill Hadfield 01768 870111 or info@gkhadfield-tilly.co.uk
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Dead Language for Sale

A strange dictionary was donated to the Willow Burn book shop in Consett, County Durham, England. It was written in Norn – an extinct language once spoken in the remote Scottish islands. Norn had largely fallen out of use by the early 1700s and the last native speaker is thought to have died on The Shetlands in 1850.

The dictionary will be sold to raise much-needed funds for Willow Burn hospice at Lanchester. The Shetland Dictionaries are for sale at £120.
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Sotheby's London

On 10 July 2013, Sotheby's London will write a new chapter in literary history, when it offers one of the most important 20th century working manuscripts remaining in private hands – Samuel Beckett's first novel, "Murphy".

Irish-born Beckett, "the last modernist", was the author of a body of work steeped in the western literary tradition but with its own highly distinctive voice. Handwritten in six exercise books between August 1935 and June 1936, in Dublin and London whilst Beckett was undergoing psychoanalysis, the manuscript, initially entitled "Sasha Murphy" is heavily revised throughout – the hundreds of cancellations and revisions providing an eloquent witness to Beckett's struggle to give form to his artistic vision. The notebooks are also full of lively doodles hinting at the author's preoccupations during this period, including recognisable portraits of James Joyce, Beckett himself, and Charlie Chaplin (later an influence on the tramps in Waiting for Godot), as well as astrological symbols and musical notations. The centrepiece in Sotheby's sale of English Literature, History, Children's Books and Illustrations, the manuscript is estimated to realise £800,000 - £1.2 million.

Peter Selley, Sotheby's Senior Specialist in Books and Manuscripts commented: "This is unquestionably the most important manuscript of a complete novel by a modern British or Irish writer to appear at auction for many decades.

I have known about the existence of this remarkable manuscript for a long time – as have a number of others in the rare book business, and some Beckett scholars – but it has only been glimpsed, tantalizingly, by a few chosen individuals during that time. The notebooks contain almost infinite riches for all those – whether scholars or collectors – interested in this most profound of modern writers, who more than anyone else, perhaps, captures the essence of modern man. The manuscript is capable of redefining Beckett studies for many years to come."

The novel is characterised by exuberant language and is the most comic of all Beckett's works, although it also has deep philosophical roots. The plot concerns the eponymous Murphy's attempts to find peace in the nothingness of the "little world" of the mind without intrusion from the outside world. Spurred on to find employment by his prostitute girlfriend, Murphy finds some tranquillity working in an insane asylum before accidentally immolating himself in his garret. Mostly set in shabby lodgings in London, with some chapters set in Dublin (where a strange trio of characters start a fruitless search for Murphy), this is the closest that Beckett ever came to a novel in the realist tradition.

The manuscript provides a text that is substantially different from the printed version of "Murphy" of 1938. It includes at least eight cancelled versions of its famous opening sentence before it reached its final form ("The sun shone, having no alternative, on the nothing new.") Beckett dated each entry in the exercise books, giving a fascinating glimpse of his working processes and the flows – and droughts – of his inspiration.

When Beckett was awarded the Nobel Prize for Literature in 1969 it was, according to the citation, "for his writing, which – in new forms for the novel and drama – in the destitution of modern man acquires its elevation." He produced a body of work of extraordinary strangeness, which presents a world view of deep pessimism, but blessed with a wonderful mordant humour. Although dense and demanding, his works speak powerfully to a remarkably wide audience of their common human experience. Best known for "Waiting For Godot", his stage play of 1953, Beckett's writing emerged from the intellectual ferment that gave rise to existentialism and absurdism. His deep connections with the inter-war avant-garde have led him to be characterised as "the last modernist". His greatest early influence was Joyce, with whom he became friendly in Paris in the late 1920s. He helped Joyce with research, took dictation for him, contributed an essay to the 1929 collection of essays on "Work in Progress", and even became romantically entangled with Joyce's daughter Lucia. In the early 30s Beckett struggled to overcome Joyce's influence and find his own voice; or, as Beckett himself put it in a 1931 letter, "I vow I will get over J. J. ere I die. Yessir".

Beckett's many admirers have always struggled to explain the power of his work, contrasting the austere beauty of his language with the base ugliness of his subject-matter – cheap boarding rooms and mental asylums, tramps, dust-bins, the decayed and the dying – and his pessimistic vision of destitution and isolation.

"I'll buy his goods, hook, line, and sinker," declared Harold Pinter, "because he leaves no stone unturned and no maggot lonely. He brings forth a body of beauty. His work is beautiful."
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