Published by The Epworth Press, 1941
Seller: Orb's Community Bookshop, Huntly, United Kingdom
First Edition Signed
Hardcover. Condition: Good. Dust Jacket Condition: Fair. 1st Edition. Minstrels of Christ Contemporary Christian Verse, inscribed by the author. Dust jacket entire but is foxed and has small tears to the back of it. Pages tanned but clean. Signed by Author(s).
Published by Published by Edward Arnold Ltd., 41 & 43 Maddox Street, London Thirteenth Impression . 1918., 1918
Seller: Little Stour Books PBFA Member, Canterbury, United Kingdom
Association Member: PBFA
Condition: Very Good. Hard back binding in publisher's original moss green cloth covered boards, blocked and lettered gilt back, fore and lower page edges untrimmed. 8vo. 8½'' x 5¼''. Contains (viii)-2, 129 + iii pp with monochrome illustrations and archive photographs throughout. From the personal library of Rev. Harry Escott with his simple bookplate to the front free end paper. Ink name inside and in Very Good clean condition, no dust wrapper. Member of the P.B.F.A. PHILOSOPHY.
Published by Published by Society for the Promotion of Christian Knowledge, Holy Trinity Church, Marylebone Road, London First Edition . 1963., 1963
Seller: Little Stour Books PBFA Member, Canterbury, United Kingdom
Association Member: PBFA
First Edition
Condition: Very Good. First edition in publisher's original illustrated card wrap covers [soft back]. 8vo. 7½'' x 5¼''. Contains 72 pp. From the personal library of Rev. Harry Escott with his simple bookplate inside. Very Good condition, no dust wrapper as issued. Member of the P.B.F.A. THEOLOGY & RELIGION.
Published by Published by Dodd, Mead and Company, New York First Edition . 1895., 1895
Seller: Little Stour Books PBFA Member, Canterbury, United Kingdom
Association Member: PBFA
First Edition
Condition: Very Good. First edition hard back binding in publisher's original lemon yellow cloth covered boards, blocked and lettered in red, embossed white quill and envelopes to the spine and the front cover. 18mo. 6½'' x 4¼''. Contains frontispiece and additional monochrome painting tipped-in, red and black printed title with border decoration, 250 pp. From the private library of Rev. Harry Escott with his name plate to the front free end paper and his Glasgow address business card loosely enclosed. Light soling to the covers and in Very Good condition. Member of the P.B.F.A. BUSINESS (Leadership).
Published by Published by Frederick Muller Ltd., 29 Great James Street, London First Edition . 1955., 1955
Seller: Little Stour Books PBFA Member, Canterbury, United Kingdom
Association Member: PBFA
First Edition Signed
Condition: Very Good. First edition hard back binding in publisher's original illustrated blue paper covered boards. 12mo. 6'' x 4¼''. Contains 56 pp with monochrome archive photographs throughout, large folding red and black map of the Colleges and Halls throughout Oxford. From the private library of Rev. Harry Escott with his private bookplate to the front paste down SIGNED 'Harry Escott' with his address in Oxford opposite, also a business card from Harry Escott loosely enclosed from an address in Glasgow with lengthy written notes by him to both sides, Pusy House card also enclosed. In Very Good condition. Member of the P.B.F.A. OXFORDSHIRE (Oxonium).
Published by All from 22 Batchwood View St Albans Hertfordshire. One from two from 1942 one from 1943 and the rest undated, 1938
Manuscript / Paper Collectible Signed
Totalling 36pp., 4to. In fair condition, bound by Escott with brown paper into paper wraps, with the front wrap signed by Escott and bearing the typed label 'LETTERS from HERBERT PALMER on "Minstrels of Christ" and my second book of verse "Soar for Victory", amended in February 1948 to "Back to the Fountain."' An interesting correspondence, casting light on the workings of the mid-twentieth century publishing industry, from the point of view of a successful traditional poet strongly opposed to modernism. Four of the earlier letters concern Escott's anthology 'Minstrels of Christ' (published by the Epworth Press in 1941), with Palmer discussing the copyright of his poems (mostly divided between Dent and Benn) and offering 'two poems over which I have entire control'. He gives his opinion that a 'carefully compiled anthology sells anything from 2000 to 20,000 copies and as I know of no Post-Victorian anthology of Religious Verse you might sell considerably more than 20,000.' He adds: 'Poets like myself who have no other means of livelihood save literature are naturally chary about giving poems, much as they desire to do, and their publishers are generally rather tiresome.' He has gives a long list of poets he has marked down 'as "religious" in a greater or lesser degree' while compiling a 'history of Post Victorian Poetry for Dent'. On 21 March 1942 he accuses Escott of having 'so curiously let me down' over the use of his poems in the anthology, which Palmer was handed by Mary Winter Were while 'reading from my little book "The Gallows-Cross" to the Poetry Society': 'I did not want them re-printed in anybook exactly as they stood [.] I had written some new poems which were rather more suitable'. He claims to have been 'slighted and snubbed and boycotted' because of his writing of 'religious and Christian verse [.] and not only because I have opposed Eliot in satire and parody - whom I do not believe in as a Christian poet, and whom I regard as a dessicatory and disintegrating influence, especially in the Technique of Poetry [.] I have no income beyond the £100 Civil List Pension I get for "distinction as a poet" (whatever that may mean) and my reviewing and meagre literary journalism brings me in very little as, owing to my increased age, I do things very slowly nowadays. As a leading poet said to me a few months ago "It is strange that so lean and bitter a trade as poetry should attract hypocrites, but it does" - and that has been my chief cross as poet and critic for over 20 years. My wife, of course, has been the chief sufferer, and at present seems to be doing most of the work - school teaching, for which her age is now unfitting her.' A letter to which Escott replied on 7 April 1942 discusses religious matters in general, beginning: 'What are you? Are you a Methodist Minister, or Church of England Parson? My father was a Wesleyan Methodist Minister, and my brother who lives at Leeds is a Wesleyan Methodist Minister.' On being asked to look over Escott's book of verse Palmer responds as follows: 'I have during the last 3 months been battered to death by poet's [sic] MSS, books etc, and I have not had time to do more than glance through your book. And I now have to review books for a livelihood. If you like to pay me a fee of two guineas I will go through your book in detail and report on it (three guineas, however, it it takes me too long) It is impossible conisdering my circumstances to do otherwise.' Three of the letters discuss Escott's book in detail over seventeen pages. He writes a preface for the volume and advises Escott on which magazines to send poems to ('Now I must charge you a Guinea fee, but I think you ought to get it back - out of one of the periodicals I have mentioned.'). In the seventh letter in the folder Palmer tells Escott that he is 'a newcomer always with a first book of verse, even when you have been publishing for years in periodicals'. In editing Escott's work, Palmer summarises his own approach: 'I think that inspiration detached form art is the poet's greatest enemy. (I know this, personally, to my cost) You ought to get all the poems right with a little application. Poetry is largely a physical thing - it is only 50 per cent content. A little inspiration and a lot of art goes further than a lot of inspiration and a little art. Keats I know would tell you this, and certainly Tennyson and the aesthetic singers of the Yellow nineties would agree with me. Very few poems are got right in the week in which they were written, and scarcely any of the famous ones.' Elsewhere Palmer renews his attack on modernism: 'A great deal of modern poetry is no more poetry than a jelly-fish is a fish or the first green corn is a harvest. And this is not merely because the verse has been insufficiently revised, but equally often because in the first moments of creation the poet (if you can always call him that) has experienced no sense of exaltation or spiritual or aesthetic excitement'. In the last letter, dated 9 November 1943, he writes that he is 'carrying the War into the Enemy's Country. Not only am I publishing a selection of my verse in Faber's Seasame Series, but I am trying to get them to publish my new volume of Verse, part of which is a downright straight forward attack on Faber's own poets. But Geoffrey Faber (the head of the firm) is a very fine traditional poet and does not appear to really approve of much that he has published, and I believe wants a re-statement of the other side of the matter. Most of these publishers have been forced into publishing modernist Verse. It had to be either that or threadbare conventional verse, or nothing at all. All the same I feel like David in the land of the Philistines, and Edward Thompson goes even further and writes to me "You are David in the land of the Philistines", - a strange reincarnation.' He does concede that he has 'discovered a very fine religious poet among the young men. Who could you imagine it is? Well it is.