Language: English
Published by Wells and Lilly, Boston, 1817
Seller: Legacy Books II, Louisville, KY, U.S.A.
Soft cover. Condition: Good. 2pp extract, salvaged from a damaged issue of the North American Review, Volume V, No. XV, September, 1817. An early appearance of the popular poem that first appeared in the Newry Telegraph, April 19, 1817. Wolfe was an Irish poet who died untimely at age 31 from tuberculosis. His only book, Poetical Remains, appeared in 1825, and included this poem along with 14 others of equal quality. The present poem begins about halfway down the first page, and includes unrelated text above. It continues and concludes on the following page and could be trimmed and attached and made suitable for framing. Scarce. Housed in protective mylar report cover.
Published by London, Hamilton Adams, and Co, 1838
Seller: MW Books, New York, NY, U.S.A.
7th Edition or Higher. Previous Author's Inscription. Good copy in the original title-blocked cloth. Spine bands and panel edges worn as with age. Remains particularly well-preserved overall; tight, bright, clean and strong. Physical description : 368pages. Subject : Wolfe, Charles 1791-1823 ; Portraits. Annotations - England - 1827. Portraits. Biographies. 3 Kg.
Condition: New. Print on Demand pp. 102.
Published by London, Hamilton Adams, and Co, 1838
Seller: MW Books Ltd., Galway, Ireland
7th Edition or Higher. Previous Author's Inscription. Good copy in the original title-blocked cloth. Spine bands and panel edges worn as with age. Remains particularly well-preserved overall; tight, bright, clean and strong. Physical description : 368pages. Subject : Wolfe, Charles 1791-1823 ; Portraits. Annotations - England - 1827. Portraits. Biographies. 1 Kg.
Published by With facsimile of postmark dated 6 September No place but from Ireland, 1816
Manuscript / Paper Collectible
The present item gives the text of the poem described by Byron as 'the most perfect ode in the English language' before its first publication in the Newry Telegraph in April 1817. See Wolfe's entry in the Oxford DNB. The source of the present item is unclear. It is a photographic facsimile, many decades old, on both sides of a 4to leaf. In fair condition, slightly creased on browned paper, with negligible loss to margin at head. With five creases from folding. Addressed to 'John Taylor Esqe / at the Revd Mr. Armstrong's / Clonoully / Cashel'. A good photographic facsimile of an autograph letter, with nothing in Wolfe's actual hand. The photograph indicates some damage to the original letter from the opening of the seal, resulting in loss of a few words. The letter begins, without salutation: 'I have completed the Burial of Sir John Moore, & will here inflict it upon you; you have no one but yourself to blame, for praising the two stanzas that I told you so much -'. Wolfe now gives a fair copy of his celebrated poem, numbering the eight stanzas. Apart from accidentals the only variations from the version published a few months later are 'lanthorn' for 'lantern' and 'struck the note' for 'struck the hour'. The first seven stanzas fill up the first side of the letter after the opening paragraph, with the eighth on the reverse, which carries the address and postmark, and the following: 'Pray write soon - you may direct as usaly to Colley, & it will follow me to the Country. Give my love to Armstrong, & Believe me / My Dear John / Ever Yours / Charles Wolfe / I again say Remember [Constantine?] Elizabeth is to be drawn among them [?] - You will pardon me for being particular about any message from that quarter.'.