Anthony Trollope and his family KAY CRADDOCK –Antiquarian
Transcription
Anthony Trollope and his family KAY CRADDOCK –Antiquarian
KAY CRADDOCK –Antiquarian Bookseller Pty Ltd The Assembly Hall Building 156 Collins Street Melbourne, Victoria 3000 Australia Telephone: 61+(0)3 9654 8506; 9654 7530 Facsimile: 61+(0)3 9654 7351 Email: [email protected] Website: www.kaycraddock.com ABN 16 007 334 312 Conditions of Sale Unless otherwise described, all books are in the original cloth or board binding, are demy or crown octavo in size, and are published in London. All books are in very good, or better condition with defects, if any, fully described. Clients are advised that our terms are strictly cash on receipt; prices are nett and quoted in Australian dollars. Packing, postage and insurance charges are extra. We accept the major credit cards. Overseas customers may pay by credit card, bank draft in Australian dollars, or by remitting payment in pounds Sterling equivalent to the Australian dollar amount due. Collectors unknown to us may be requested to supply suitable trade references, or to remit on receipt of a pro-forma invoice. Anthony Trollope and his family Hours of Business Monday to Thursday 10 am– 6 pm Friday 10 am– 7 pm Saturday 10 am– 4 pm Catalogue Two Hundred and Nine Kay Craddock –Antiquarian Bookseller Pty Ltd Illustrations Cover — Item 153 Title page — Item 2 Page 36 — Item 99 Inside back cover — Item 205 A Trollope collection from the library of Geoffrey William Swainson 7 July 1933 –20 February 2005 the late Geoffrey William Swainson Love me, love my Trollope. Geoff stumbled across the novels of Anthony Trollope during the 1970s and was, to use his terminology, smitten. He began to collect the novels and writings, and then, over the years, the collection broade ne dt oi nc l u dec r i t i c a lpe r s pe c t i v e sone ve r ya s pe c tofTr ol l ope ’ sl i f ea nd works. Then came the novels, biographies, and literary criticism of other Victorian writers, and the collection eventually expanded to include all aspects of Victorian life and culture. Theor i g i na lpur pos eoft hec ol l e c t i onwa st oobt a i nag oodr e a di ngc opyofa l lTr ol l ope ’ s works. In the 1990s, the focus shifted towards the illustrations. Geoff discovered that there were different illustrations in different editions and he tried to ensure that his collection contained all of them For Geoff, the absorbing interest of the novels and travel writings was the way in which Trollope portrayed the reality of everyday Victorian life. He did not usually read novels: his normal reading consisted of dense textbooks about the origin of life, philosophy, mathematics, computer theory, and, his other passion, birds. His bird library numbered close to 2,000 volumes and was, arguably, one of the best private collections outside dedicated ornithological institutions. Second-ha ndbo ok s ho pswe r eGe of f ’ ss e c ondh ome ,ors houl dIs a y‘ na t ur a lha bi t a t ’e v e na f t e r the advent of the Internet. One of our first expeditions as a courting couple in 1985 was to a second-hand bookshop in Eltham where we found a first edition of La Vendée: A Historical Roma nc e .Att het i me ,Iwa smys t i f i e dbyGe of f ’ se x c i t e me ntbutIs oonl e a r ntt ha tTr ol l ope was to be an integral part of our 19 years of companionship. Introduction: Anne Bittner Part One: The writings of Anthony Trollope — Items 1– 68 Part Two: The writings of Mrs. Frances Trollope and Thomas Adolphus Trollope — Items 69– 81 Part Three: Trollopiana — Items 82– 209 Apart from haunting bookshops in person, Geoff had a list of bookshops worldwide to which he regularly circulated his requirements. Since he was an early adopter of computer technology, he used mail merge to generate these letters. Book lists, letters, and responses are among his papers. Then came the Internet which Geoff did use regularly and which gave a sort of instant satisfaction, if one had the funds, but he mourned the loss of the thrill of the chase when one never quite knew what would turn up in the mail. I na d di t i ont ohi sbo okc ol l e c t i on,Ge of f ’ sk nowl e dg eofTr ol l opewa si nc r e a s e dt hr o ug h membership of the Trollope Society and, from 2003, by taking part in a web-based discussion group. The latter was a constant source of stimulation in the last months of his life when he was confined to the house, and, as he became weaker, he found comfort in reading the familiar stories once more. I twoul dbeGe of f ’ swi s ht ha tt hene wowne r sofhi smuc h-loved books by and about Trollope, should gain as much enjoyment from them as he did. December 2005 Anne Bittner Part One: The Writings of Anthony Trollope 1. AN AUTOBIOGRAPHY. With an Introduction by Charles Morgan. Pp. 320; top edges green; price-clipped dust wrapper, the backstrip browned; bookseller's sticker at foot of upper pastedown, small surface graze to frontispiece; Williams & Norgate, 1946. First edition thus. $45.00 2. AN ILLUSTRATED AUTOBIOGRAPHY. Including How the 'Mastiffs' went to Iceland. Introduction by Joanna Trollope. Pp. xiv+306, frontispiece portrait, text illustrations; roy. 8vo; 2 small indentations to upper board, corners lightly bruised; dust wrapper, backstrip and top edge of front panel slightly faded, the front panel also slightly scarred; top edges of leaves a trifle foxed; Alan Sutton, 1987. First edition thus. *Trollope's Autobiography was first published in 1883. The largely autobiographical How the 'Mastiffs' went to Iceland was originally published in an extremely limited edition in 1878. $50.00 3. AN EDITOR'S TALES. Pp. [iv]+366+[14](publisher's catalogue), floral patterned endpapers; green cloth, lettered and decorated in gilt, green, & black, corners a trifle rubbed; a little light foxing and occasional faint soiling; Ward, Lock, n.d.[c.1883?]. Sixth edition. Select Library of Fiction series. *The stories in An Editor's Tales were first printed in Saint Paul's Magazine in 1869 and 1870; then published in book form by Strahan & Co. in 1870. There was no parts issue. Sadleir, p. 113, notes that the copyright of this volume was, 'very shortly after publication', taken over by Chapman & Hall, who issued it (as Mary Gresley and an editor's tales) in their yellow-back Select Library of Fiction series. In 1876 the same firm issued the stories again, under their original title. The present copy is presumably a reprint of that edition. $150.00 4. AN EYE FOR AN EYE. New edition, in one volume. Pp. [ii](tipped-in advertisement, verso blank)+viii+344+[4](advertisements), frontispiece with tissue guard; green cloth, lettered in gilt & black, decorated in black & blind, slightly rubbed and flecked, edges lightly worn; uncut; upper hinge starting, lacking the upper free endpaper, bookseller's stamp on verso of preliminary advertisement (which is also slightly torn), signature & date (1881) on half-title page, a little light foxing and soiling, the first few leaves torn at top edge from careless opening, last couple of leaves lightly creased; Chapman & Hall, 1879. First one volume edition. See Sadleir 53, note, p. 170. *An Eye for an Eye first appeared in the Whitehall Review from August 1878 to February 1879. Chapman & Hall published the book in two volumes in 1879. The present edition was the third volume in Chapman & Hall's St. James's Library series. $150.00 5. AN EYE FOR AN EYE. Pp. xii+202(last blank); bottom edge of boards shelf worn, the lower board slightly rubbed; top edges red; dust wrapper, edges a trifle rubbed and split; bookseller's sticker at foot of upper pastedown, small surface graze near centre of upper free endpaper; Blond, 1966. Doughty Library No. 1. *Originally published in 1879. The Introduction to this edition is by Simon Raven. $30.00 6. ANTHONY TROLLOPE: THE COLLECTED SHORTER FICTION. Edited by Julian Thompson. Pp. xvi+960(last blank); thick med. 8vo; dust wrapper; bookseller's sticker at foot of upper pastedown; Robinson Publishing, 1992. First edition. *Trollope wrote short stories from 1859 (just before the publication of Framley Parsonage in the Cornhill Magazine made his name) until the end of his life, publishing 42 in all. This is the first time all of his shorter fiction has been collected in one volume. $50.00 7. ANTHONY TROLLOPE: A POCKET ANTHOLOGY. Edited by Dr. Richard Mullen. Pp. 62; pictorial papered boards; The Trollope Society, 1992. *Collection of quotes from Trollope, mainly from the novels, on numerous subjects, including religion, food, America, fox hunting, and education. $25.00 8. AUSTRALIA. Edited by P. D. Edwards & R. B. Joyce. Pp. 792, 12 plates, 2 text maps, appendices, index; thick med. 8vo; light brown art. leather, spine lettered in gilt, tiny surface chip to upper board just below top edge; within pictorial card slipcase with cloth sides; upper hinge just starting; University of Queensland Press, St. Lucia, 1967. First edition thus. *First published in 1873 by Chapman & Hall as part of Australia and New Zealand. $75.00 9. THE BEDSIDE BARSETSHIRE. Compiled by Lance O. Tingay. Illustrated by Gwen Raverat. Pp. 312(last blank), title page vignette, text illustrations, endpaper map; pictorial cloth, boards a trifle canted, edges lightly rubbed; top edges red; the free endpapers offset, lower hinge cracking, a little faint foxing; Faber, 1949. First edition. *Anthology of extracts from Trollope's Barsetshire novels, as well as a Who's Who, a Handy Guide to Barsetshire, and an essay, Map Making in Barsetshire, which was first published in The Trollopian. $45.00 10. THE BERTRAMS. In three volumes. Introduction by James R. Kincaid. Series Editor N. John Hall. Pp. [xii]+iv+336(last blank)+[2](list of titles)+[iv]+iv+344+[2](list of titles)+[iv] +iv+332(last blank)+[2](list of titles); gilt lettered dark green cloth; bookseller's sticker at foot of upper pastedowns, tiny puncture near centre of upper hinge Volume II; Arno Press, New York, 1981. Selected works of Anthony Trollope series. *First published by Chapman & Hall in 1859. $100.00 11. CAN YOU FORGIVE HER? With illustrations. In two volumes. Pp. [viii]+320+ viii+320, 39 [of 40] plates (including frontispiece both volumes — lacking the plate opposite p. 194 in Volume II); grey papered boards, with printed paper title label on spines, joints starting and corners worn both volumes; all edges sprinkled red; a little light foxing and soiling, plus a few slight damp stains to plate margins, a few of the plates with pencilled page numbers (instructions for binder), occasional small edge splits or chips; Chapman & Hall, 1864-1865. First edition, bound from the parts?, without advertisements, but with stab holes occasionally visible. Sadleir 19. *Inscribed (presumably by Trollope): With kind regards from the Author at head of title page. The first of the 'Palliser' series, Can You Forgive Her? originally appeared in twenty shilling parts, published monthly from January 1864 to August 1865, with the title pages dated differently (Volume I 1864, Volume II 1865), and the preliminary pages for subsequent book-issue included in parts X and XX. The first ten parts were illustrated by Hablot K. Browne ('Phiz'), the others by a Miss Taylor. $1,500.00 12. CASTLE RICHMOND. With an Introduction by Robert Lee Wolff. In three volumes. Pp. xxx+vi+304(last blank)+[vi]+iv+300+[iv]+vi+290(last blank)+[8](advertisments, last blank); navy cloth, spines lettered in gilt; bookseller's sticker at foot of upper pastedowns; Garland Publishing, New York, 1979. Ireland from the Act of Union 1800 to the death of Parnell 1891 series, no. 55. Seventy-seven novels and collections of shorter stories by twentytwo Irish and Anglo-Irish novelists, selected by Professor Robert Lee Wolff. *Facsimile, with new introduction and notes, of one of several novels by Trollope with an Irish setting, originally published by Chapman & Hall in 1860. $150.00 13. THE CHRONICLES OF BARSETSHIRE. In eight volumes, totalling over 3,300 pages (incluing a 32 page publisher's catalogue at end of Volume I, dated August 1878, from which pp. 13/14 has been torn out), frontispiece to each volume; dark olive green/brown cloth, the spines lettered and ruled in gilt, upper boards decorated in black, lower boards in blind, edges slightly worn and occasionally lightly bumped, the spines slightly chipped and split at extremities; top edges uncut; hinges starting at a few points, bookseller's blind stamp on upper free endpaper Volume I, name in ink on upper pastedowns, with a different inked signature at head of first text page Volumes II to VIII (and very faintly in pencil in Volume I), a little light foxing, offsetting, and occasional slight soiling, a few small edge chips or splits; Chapman & Hall, 1879. First collected edition, later issues?, with Volume I possibly first issue(?). (All but the first volume, The Warden, contain the amended title page giving the correct number of volumes; Volume I calls for six volumes). See Sadleir pp. 245-248. *Originally intended to comprise only six volumes, because Trollope did not regard The Small House at Allington as part of the Barsetshire series. The introduction to the first volume, although unsigned, was written by Trollope especially for this edition. Sadleir, p. 245 states: 'Partly because he wrote so many books, but mainly because of the remarkable suddenness with which after his death his popularity and reputation vanished, Trollope has never been published in a complete, or even an approximately complete, uniform edition… There was, however, one partial "Collected Edition" — issued during the author's lifetime, including at least a page or two of matter not elsewhere published, and containing illustrations specially designed — which merits record in a complete bibliography of Trollope's first editions. This edition is the eightvolume Chronicles of Barsetshire published by Chapman & Hall in 1878… In reissues the demode series-title [calling for six volumes] was replaced by one giving the correct number of volumes in the set.' According to Sadleir, the series was reissued in 1887 in identical format and binding, with no indication that there had been a previous edition; possibly composed of the balance of the 1878 sheets. $1,500.00 14. COLLECTED SHORT STORIES. Introduction by Susan L. Humphreys. Series Editor N. John Hall. Pp. [xiv]+[226](each story individually paginated as in the original magazine publication)+[2](list of titles); med. 8vo; gilt lettered dark green cloth; Arno Press, New York, 1981. Selected works of Anthony Trollope series. *Six short stories, never republished in volume form during Trollope's lifetime, including The Two Heroines of Plumplington (which is set in Barsetshire). $35.00 15. THE COMMENTARIES OF CAESAR. Introduction by Ruth apRoberts. Series editor N. John Hall. Pp. [xii]+vi+182(last blank)+[2](list of titles); gilt lettered dark green cloth; Arno Press, New York, 1981. Selected works of Anthony Trollope series. *Originally published by Blackwood, London, in 1870, in the series Ancient Classics for English Readers, edited by the Rev. W. Lucas Collins. $35.00 16. THE COMPLETE SHORT STORIES [AND MISCELLANEOUS TROLLOPIANA]. In five volumes. Volume One: THE CHRISTMAS STORIES. Pp. xvi+248; Volume Two: EDITORS AND WRITERS. Pp. xviii+238(last blank); Volume Three: TOURISTS AND COLONIALS. Pp. xvi+260; Volume Four: COURTSHIP AND MARRIAGE. Pp. xviii+282; Volume Five: THE JOURNEY TO PANAMA AND OTHER STORIES. Pp. xvi+220(last blank); each volume with a Foreword by Joanna Trollope and Introduction by Betty Breyer; [together with] four miscellaneous (non-fiction) volumes by Trollope, comprising: CLERGYMEN OF THE CHURCH OF ENGLAND. Illustrations by David Eccles. Introduction by the Very Reverend Michael Mayne. Pp. xx+130, 10 plates; HUNTING SKETCHES. With an Introduction by Alistair Grant and nine illustrations by David Eccles. Pp. [viii]+98(last blank), frontispiece plus 8 plates, tailpiece decorations; THACKERAY. With an Introduction by Pamela Neville-Sington. Pp. xvi+210, frontispiece plus 7 plates, half-title and tailpiece vignettes (the illustrations selected from the Bradbury & Evans 1849 edition of Vanity Fair); THE NEW ZEALANDER. [Edited by N. John Hall]. Pp. xlvi+226, 8 plates, appendices, index; [and] two volumes of Trollopiana, viz: THE PENGUIN COMPANION TO TROLLOPE. By Richard Mullen & James Munson. Pp. xxii+552; and BARCHESTER PILGRIMAGE. By Ronald A. Knox. Pp. x+278, full page sketch map, index; uniformly bound in variously coloured decorative cloth, the spines lettered in gilt; The Trollope Society, n.d.[mid 1990s]. Together, eleven volumes. $400.00 17. EVERYONE AND EVERYTHING IN TROLLOPE. In four volumes. Volume One: THE NOVELS: IRELAND, BARSETSHIRE, THE PALLISERS, AND LONDON. Pp. lviii+844(last blank); Volume Two: THE NOVELS: FAMILY LAW, WOMAN, MAN, THE DARK SIDE, AND COSMOPOLITAN TROLLOPE. Pp. xliv+[845]-1756(last blank); Volume Three: THE SHORTER FICTION AND SKETCHES: A TAXONOMY. Pp. xxxviii+[1757]-2584; Volume Four: THE COMPLETE NONFICTION AND THE TOPICON. Pp. xlii+[2585]-3750; each volume with frontispiece portrait, text illustrations (some full page), and index; all thick med. 8vo; maroon cloth, blocked in black and lettered in gilt, boards occasionally a trifle rubbed; M. E. Sharpe, New York, 2005. $500.00 18. THE FIXED PERIOD. In two volumes. Pp. [vi]+200+[vi]+204(last blank); original red cloth, spines lettered in gilt (slightly dulled), small gilt floral medallion at centre of upper boards, the cloth slightly soiled and lightly flecked and rubbed, edges lightly worn, with small split at foot of lower joint Volume II; dark green endpapers; top and fore-edges uncut, a few leaves carelessly opened; hinges starting at a couple of points, occasional slight soiling; Blackwood, Edinburgh, 1882. First edition. Sadleir 62. *A novel set in the South Pacific, on an island colonized by 'the elite of the selected population of New Zealand'. The inhabitants of Trollope's Britannula are fated to be put to death at the age of sixty-eight, the 'Fixed Period' of the title, since after that year they could expect only increased misery and uselessness. Originally serialized in Blackwood's Magazine from October 1881 to March 1882. With the exception of an American edition and the unauthorized Tauchnitz edition, both issued later in the same year, this novel was not reprinted until well into the twentieth century. From the library of the Parliament of Victoria, with their small oval shelf label on upper boards, and a few internal ink stamps. $750.00 19. THE FIXED PERIOD. In two volumes. Introduction by David Skilton. Series Editor N. John Hall. Pp. [xxvi]+2+[2](list of titles)+[x]+204(last blank)+[2](list of titles); gilt lettered dark green cloth, upper board Volume II a trifle marked; bookseller's sticker at foot of upper pastedowns; Arno Press, New York, 1981. Selected works of Anthony Trollope series. $70.00 20. THE FIXED PERIOD. Edited by R. H. Super. Pp. xviii+184(last blank)+[6](last advertisement, others blank); grey cloth, the spine blocked in red and lettered in gilt; University of Michigan Press, Ann Arbor, Michigan, 1990. $60.00 21. FOUR LECTURES. The Civil Service as a profession (1861); The present condition of the northern states of the American union (1862 or 1863); Higher education of women (1868); On English prose fiction as a rational amusement (1870). Printed verbatim from the original texts. Edited with collations, notes, etc., by Morris L. Parrish. Pp. viii+140(last blank); dark green textured cloth, spine lettered and ruled in gilt; fore and bottom edges uncut; a couple of small damp marks to title page; Constable, 1938. First collected edition, limited to 150 copies. *The four titles were originally privately issued for Trollope's use when delivering the lectures; they were undated, and there is no accurate record of the times and places where the lectures were delivered. [See Sadleir U1-U4]. $300.00 22. THE GOLDEN LION OF GRANPERE. Introduction by David Skilton. Series Editor N. John Hall. Pp. [xviii]+354(last blank)+[2](list of titles); gilt lettered dark green cloth; Arno Press, New York, 1981. Selected works of Anthony Trollope series. *First serialized in Good Words from January to August 1872, published in book form, London, in May 1872. $35.00 27. HUNTING SKETCHES. Introduction by Nina Burgis. Series Editor N. John Hall. Pp. [x]+116(last blank)+[2](list of titles); gilt lettered dark green cloth; Arno Press, New York, 1981. Selected works of Anthony Trollope series. *Sketches written in 1865 for the Pall Mall Gazette, then published in book form by Chapman & Hall in 1865. $35.00 23. HARRY HEATHCOTE OF GANGOIL. A tale of Australian bush life. Pp. [iv]+314(last blank)+44(publisher's catalogue, dated October 1873); rebound in recent dark green cloth, the spine lettered in gilt; uncut; new endpapers; ex library copy, with ink and purple pencil numbers on title and contents pages, plus a few scattered stamps, the top forecorner of title page cropped, a few small edge chips to outer leaves, some light foxing, soiling, and occasional minor wear & tear; Sampson Low, Marston, Low, & Searle, 1874. First U.K. edition. Sadleir 43, calling for a 48 page publisher's catalogue at end. [The American edition seems to have predated the English one by nine months; see Sadleir, p. 142]. *Harry Heathcote of Gangoil was originally published as the Christmas number of The Graphic on December 25, 1873. The novel is based on Trollope's experiences in Australia in 1871, when he visited his son's sheep station. $120.00 28. THE IRISH FAMINE. Six letters to the Examiner, 1849/1850. Edited by Lance O. Tingay. Pp. [vi]+30, historical glossary; printed stiff paper wrappers, stapled; The Silverbridge Press, 1987. *Reprints Trollope's letters to the Examiner in 1849 and 1850, on the subject of the Irish famine; his first venture into political writing. $50.00 24. HARRY HEATHCOTE OF GANGOIL. A tale of Australian bush life. With an Introduction by Marcie Muir. Pp. 160(last blank), frontispiece plus 5 plates; dust wrapper, worn and slightly soiled, two long vertical tears to front panel tape repaired on reverse (with some resultant marking), the edges lightly split and chipped, small piece torn from foot of backstrip, bookseller's sticker on upper flap; free endpapers lightly offset, tiny damp spot to top edge of a couple of leaves; Lansdowne, Melbourne, 1963. First edition thus. $40.00 25. HE KNEW HE WAS RIGHT. With sixty-four illustrations by Marcus Stone. Two volumes in one. Pp. xii+384+[iii]-xii+384, 32 plates and 32 pictorial headpieces; rebound in modern half calf, the spine decorated in blind, with contrasting red & black gilt lettered leather titling pieces, marbled papered boards; uncut; new endpapers; frontispiece a trifle cropped, Volume II lacking the half-title page, and with the fore-edge of the plate opposite p. 74 in that volume slightly silverfished, scattered foxing and occasional slight soiling; Strahan & Co., 1869. First edition in book form, later issue from the original sheets? See Sadleir 31, Addenda & Corrigenda (1934). *He Knew He Was Right was originally published from October 1868 to May 1869 in 32 weekly parts, followed by a parallel series of eight monthly parts from November 1869 onwards (initially by Virtue until part thirty, when Strahan took over the publication). The first edition in book form contains all the illustrations from the weekly parts except Marcus Stone's design for the wrappers, and was not reprinted. Sadleir's 1934 Addenda and Corrigenda, p. 5, states that 'A secondary issue of first-edition sheets was made in one volume, bound in maroon cloth similarly blocked to first edition. The half title to Vol. II was dropped from this issue'. This copy is either that issue in a modern binding, or the original two volumes rebound as one, with the half-title to Volume II discarded during binding. A one volume cheap edition was subsequently published in 1870, but with only 10 illustrations. In 1871 the book was taken over by Chapman & Hall and issued in their 'yellowback' Select Library of Fiction series. $600.00 26. HOW THE "MASTIFFS" WENT TO ICELAND. With illustrations by Mrs. Hugh Blackburn. Introduction by Coral Lansbury. Series Editor N. John Hall. Pp. [xii]+46+[2](list of titles), frontispiece map, plus 16 plates; demy 4to; gilt lettered dark green cloth; Arno Press, New York, 1981. Selected works of Anthony Trollope series. *Trollope wrote How the "Mastiffs" went to Iceland at the request of John Burns of Castle Wemyss, later Lord Inverclyde. The book was privately printed (but not formally published) by Virtue & Co, probably in October 1878. This is the first reprinting. $45.00 29. IS HE POPENJOY? New edition. Pp. viii+422(last blank)+[2](advertisements)+[8] (publisher's catalogue [Select Library] see foot-note), frontispiece; red cloth, spine lettered and decorated in gilt & black, upper board in black, lower board decorated in blind, slightly soiled and worn, rebacked, with all but the extremities of the original spine laid down; uncut; hinges repaired, bookseller's blind stamp on upper free endpaper, bottom edge of frontispiece cropped, several leaves carelessly opened, with resultant ragged edges, a little light foxing, soiling and occasional slight creasing; Chapman & Hall, 1879. First one volume edition. *Originally serialized in All the Year Round from October 1877 until July 1878. First published in book form by Chapman & Hall in three volumes in 1878. [See Sadleir 49, footnote: 'Is He Popenjoy? was never reprinted in its original three-volume form. In 1879 or 1880 it was issued as a 'yellowback' at two shillings in Chapman & Hall's Select Library of Fiction.' ] $250.00 30. LA VENDEE. An historical romance. Pp. 398(see footnote), frontispiece with tissue guard; brown textured cloth, lettered and decorated in gilt, black & blind, lightly worn; upper hinge starting, a few corners lightly creased, occasional slight soiling; [Chapman & Hall, London, 1875?]. One volume edition. [See Sadleir 3]. *Reading copy only, lacking the preliminary pages (including the title page), but with the text of the novel complete. Trollope's third novel, originally published (with no illustrations) in three volumes by Henry Colburn in 1850. According to Sadleir, p. 14: 'La Vendee was never reprinted in three volume form, nor found reissue of any kind between original publication and about 1875, when it was included at two shillings as a "yellow-back" in Chapman & Hall's Select Library of Fiction' [this edition possibly a reissue of the 1875 edition]. $150.00 31. THE LANDLEAGUERS. With an Introduction by Robert Lee Wolff. In three volumes. Pp. xxx+x+280+[iv]+viii+296+[iv]+viii+292(last blank)+[8](advertisements, last blank); navy cloth, spines lettered in gilt, upper board Volume III a trifle marked; bookseller's sticker at foot of upper pastedowns; Garland Publishing, New York, 1979. Ireland from the Act of Union 1800 to the death of Parnell 1891 series, no. 57. Seventy-seven novels and collections of shorter stories by twenty-two Irish and Anglo-Irish novelists, selected by Professor Robert Lee Wolff. *Facsimile, with new introduction and notes, of Trollope's last, unfinished novel, originally published posthumously by Chatto & Windus in 1883. $150.00 32. THE LAST CHRONICLE OF BARSET. With thirty-two illustrations by George H. Thomas. In two volumes [here bound as one]. Pp. [iv]+384+[iv]+384, 32 plates (some with tissue guards, including frontispiece to both volumes), pictorial headpieces; nineteenth century half black leather, spine lettered and ruled in gilt, brown cloth boards, faded and lightly worn, edges fraying slightly, upper board faintly damp stained; hinges cracked, scattered light foxing and soiling, with light damp stains to outer leaves and several plate margins, a few small edge splits or chips; Smith, Elder, 1867. First edition, bound (without advertisements) from the parts, with stab holes occasionally visible. Sadleir 26, issue A (with the phrase regarding translation rights present on verso of title, the error Crawley instead of Toogood at line 21 page 298 in Volume II, and the shorter caption, Because of Papa's disgrace, to the plate opposite page 120 in the same volume). *The final novel in the 'Barchester' series, The Last Chronicle of Barset originally appeared in thirty-two sixpenny parts, published weekly from December 1, 1866 to July 6, 1867. Sadleir notes that this book 'shows a confusing variety of issues', with two printings even of the parts issue. He also points out that cloth cases were sold separately by Smith, Elder to persons owning sets of the parts, and that the publishers also accepted worn copies of the book for repair and recasing. $2,000.00 33. A LETTER FROM ANTHONY TROLLOPE describing a visit to California in 1875. Wood engravings by Mallette Dean. Pp. x+32+[2](colophon, verso blank), frontispiece and 3 text illustrations printed in various single colours, the frontispiece and title within decorative borders printed in red; qr. dark green cloth, lettered and decorated in silver/grey, orange patterned papered boards, top edge of upper board slightly faded, the spine a trifle rubbed at foot; fore and bottom edges uncut; tiny hole and small surface graze just below top edge of upper free endpaper; The Colt Press, San Francisco, 1946. Edition limited to 500 copies. Number 5 of the Colt Press Series of California Classics. *Trollope returned from his second visit to Australia in 1875 via San Francisco. He described his voyage in a series of twenty letters, published at the time in the Liverpool Weekly Mercury from July 3, to November 13, 1875. This letter was first reprinted in the Huntington Library Quarterly of October 1939. This is the first illustrated edition of the text. $150.00 34. THE LETTERS OF ANTHONY TROLLOPE. Edited by Bradford Allen Booth. Pp. xxx+520(last colophon), index; brown buckram, spine lettered in gilt, boards a trifle rubbed, spine slightly faded; bottom edges uncut; lower hinge starting, the free endpapers faintly offset, outer leaves and edges a trifle foxed; Oxford University Press, 1951. First edition. *Uniform with the Oxford Trollope. The Ralph Smith copy, with his bookplate on upper pastedown. $60.00 35. THE LETTERS OF ANTHONY TROLLOPE. Edited by N. John Hall, with the assistance of Nina Burgis. In two volumes. Volume One, 1835-1870. Pp. xl+536(last blank), full page illustrations, chronology; Volume Two, 1871-1882. Pp. xviii+537-1082, full page illustrations, chronology, appendices, index; both volumes med. 8vo; qr. maroon cloth, spines blocked in black and lettered & decorated in gilt, marbled papered boards; dust wrappers, edges a trifle rubbed (and slightly split first volume), the backstrips faded; top edges of leaves faintly foxed, bottom edges slightly soiled; Stanford University Press, Stanford, California, 1983. First edition. *Fully annotated edition of Trollope's letters, containing more than twice the number previously published. $175.00 36. THE LIFE OF CICERO. In two volumes. Introduction by Ruth apRoberts. Series Editor N. John Hall. Pp. [x]+viii+420(last blank)+[2](list of titles)+[iv]+viii+424(last blank)+ [2](list of titles), appendices, index; gilt lettered dark green cloth; Arno Press, New York, 1981. Selected works of Anthony Trollope series. *First published by Chapman & Hall in 1880. $70.00 37. LINDA TRESSEL. In two volumes. Introduction by James Gindin. Series Editor N. John Hall. Pp. [xiv]+216+[2](list of titles)+[iv]+216(last blank)+[2](list of titles); gilt lettered dark green cloth; Arno Press, New York, 1981. Selected works of Anthony Trollope series. *Originally published anonymously, first as a serial in Blackwood's Magazine from October 1867 to May 1868, then in book form in May 1868. Linda Tressel was the second of Trollope's unsuccessful attempts to change his characteristic style and type of story. $70.00 38. LONDON TRADESMEN. Foreword by Michael Sadleir. Pp. xiv+98(last blank); brown cloth, spine lettered in red, edges lightly rubbed, the spine dulled; top edges red; a little light foxing; Elkin Mathews & Marrot, 1928. First trade edition. *Eleven essays on various trades (plumber, chemist, butcher, greengrocer, and others), which originally appeared in the Pall Mall Gazette, from July 10th to September 7th, 1880. $50.00 39. LORD PALMERSTON. Introduction by John Halperin. Series Editor N. John Hall. Pp. [xiv]+220(last blank)+[2](list of titles), index; gilt lettered dark green cloth; Arno Press, New York, 1981. Selected works of Anthony Trollope series. *Originally published by W. Isbister, London, in 1882, in the English Political Leaders series. $35.00 40. LOTTA SCHMIDT AND OTHER STORIES. Introduction by Reginald Terry. Series editor N. John Hall. Pp. [xx]+404(last blank) +[2](list of titles); gilt lettered dark green cloth; pp. 189/90 lightly creased; Arno Press, New York, 1981. Selected works of Anthony Trollope series. *Originally published by Strahan, London, in 1867, Lotta Schmidt was Trollope's third volume of short stories. $35.00 41. THE MACDERMOTS OF BALLYCLORAN. In three volumes. Introduction by N. John Hall. Series Editor N. John Hall. Pp. [xxiv]+346(last blank)+[2](list of titles)+[vi]+382+ [2](list of titles)+ [vi]+438(last blank+[2](list of titles); gilt lettered dark green cloth; Arno Press, New York, 1981. Selected works of Anthony Trollope series. *Tr ol l ope ’ sf i rst novel, originally published by Thomas Cautley Newby in 1847. $100.00 42. MALACHI'S COVE AND OTHER STORIES AND ESSAYS. Edited and with an Introduction by Richard Mullen. Pp. xxii+146(last blank), bibliographical note, notes; dust wrapper; Tabb House, Padstow, Cornwall, 1985. First edition thus. *Five short stories and two essays by Trollope. $50.00 43. MARION FAY. A novel. With illustrations by William Small. Edited by R. H. Super. Pp. xxxvi+452(last blank), 26 full page illustrations; top fore-corner of upper board a trifle bruised; dust wrapper, slightly soiled, edges lightly rubbed and split; bookseller's sticker at foot of upper pastedown; University of Michigan Press, Ann Arbor, Michigan, 1983. Second printing thus. *Trollope's forty-third novel, first serialized in the Graphic, December 1881 to June 1882, published in book form in May 1882, but seldom reprinted. $45.00 44. MISCELLANEOUS ESSAYS AND REVIEWS. Introduction by Michael Y. Mason. Series Editor N. John Hall. Pp. [xxii]+[464](some in double column, with each essay individually paginated as in the original magazine publication)+[2](list of titles); med. 8vo; gilt lettered dark green cloth; Arno Press, New York, 1981. Selected works of Anthony Trollope series. *Collection of articles which Trollope contributed to various journals, here republished for the first time. $35.00 45. MISS MACKENZIE. In two volumes. Introduction by Juliet McMaster. Series Editor N. John Hall. Pp. [xviii]+vi+312+[2](list of titles)+[ii]+vi+314(last blank)+[2](list of titles); gilt lettered dark green cloth; bookseller's sticker at foot of upper pastedowns; Arno Press, New York, 1981. Selected works of Anthony Trollope series. *Originally published by Chapman & Hall in 1865. $70.00 46. NEVER, NEVER — NEVER, NEVER. Edited with a Preface by Lance O. Tingay. Pp. vi+16(last blank); brown cloth, with printed paper title label on upper board; spare label tipped-in at lower endpaper; privately printed for Lance O. Tingay & Michael J. Tingay at The Valley Press, 1971. Edition limited to 25 numbered copies; this one of 15 with plain brown endpapers. *Loosely inserted are two signed presentation slips from the editor (one holograph, one typescript), both dated 1989. A brief parody of The Small House at Allington and the character of Lily Dale. (Also introduces the Rev. Abraham Dribble and his wife, the Right Honorable Catharine Mount Energy). First published in Sheets for the Cradle, a shortlived charitable magazine published at the end of 1875 by Susan Hale, in Boston, Massachusetts. The magazine appeared only from December 6 to 11, with Trollope's contribution in numbers 1, 3, and 5. This is the only known example of Anthony Trollope publishing a parody of his own work. He was in Boston in October 1875, on his way back to England after his second visit to Australia, and wrote: 'As Bret Harte says I have no sense of humour, and won't laugh at me, I must try to laugh at myself, and make fun of the heroine I have loved best'. $150.00 47. THE NEW ZEALANDER. Edited with an Introduction by N. John Hall. Pp. xlvi+226, 8 plates, appendices, index; dust wrapper, edges a trifle rubbed and split; name and date in ink on upper free endpaper; Clarendon Press, Oxford, 1972. First edition. *'Trollope's hitherto unpublished The New Zealander (the title derives from Macaulay's 'prophecy' that a visitor from New Zealand would one day sketch the ruins of St. Paul's from a broken arch of London Bridge) is a non-fiction general survey of Victorian England. Written 1855-56, at the beginning of Trollope's career as a popular novelist, it contains his views on clergymen, members of Parliament, lawyers, newspapers, literature, art, and nearly every aspect of English life'. [wrapper blurb]. $35.00 48. NINA BALATKA. In two volumes. Introduction by James Gindin. Series Editor N. John Hall. Pp. [xviii]+228+[2](list of titles)+[iv]+216(last blank)+[2](list of titles); gilt lettered dark green cloth, upper board of Volume I a trifle marked; minor production fault to top forecorner of upper pastedown, and occasional faint marks to margins Volume I; Arno Press, New York, 1981. Selected works of Anthony Trollope series. *Originally published anonymously, first as a serial in Blackwood's Magazine from July 1866 to January 1867, then in book form in January 1867. Nina Balatka was the first of Trollope's unsuccessful attempts to change his characteristic style and type of story. $70.00 49. THE NOBLE JILT. [and] DID HE STEAL IT? Preface by Michael Sadleir. Introduction by Robert H. Taylor. With a Foreword by Robert H. Taylor. Series Editor N. John Hall. Pp. [vi]+xxiv+182+[xiv]+64+[2](list of titles), index; gilt lettered dark green cloth; Arno Press, New York, 1981. Selected works of Anthony Trollope series. *Trollope's only two plays, never performed, and not published during his lifetime: first appearing in 1923 and 1952 respectively. The Noble Jilt was the basis for the novel Can You Forgive Her? and Did He Steal It? derived from The Last Chronicle of Barset. $35.00 50. NON-FICTION WORKS. Seven titles in twelve volumes, comprising: 1. AUSTRALIA AND NEW ZEALAND. In two volumes. Introduction by Peter Edwards. Pp. x+534(last blank)+x+516, 2 full page maps, appendices, indices; 2. NORTH AMERICA. In two volumes. Introduction by John Letts. Pp. viii+468(last blank)+vi+494, appendices, index; 3. SOUTH AFRICA. In two volumes. Introduction by Anthony Kenny. Pp. xvi+352+vi+352, double page map, full page plan, index; 4. THE WEST INDIES AND THE SPANISH MAIN. In two volumes. Introduction by Stephen Tumim. Pp. viii+168+[ii] +[169]-396(last blank), 2 full page maps; 5. THE LIFE OF CICERO. In two volumes. Introduction by Enoch Powell. Pp. x+420(last blank)+vi+424(last blank), appendices, index; 6. LORD PALMERSTON. Introduction by John Letts. Pp. x+214; 7. LONDON TRADESMEN. Introduction by David Skilton. Pp. xii+98(last blank); all uniformly bound in navy cloth, the spines blocked in black and lettered & decorated in gilt; top edges blue; Omnium Publishing for The Trollope Society, 1993-2002. *Reprints of most of Trollope's non-fiction: the travel books; his biographies of Lord Palmerston (originally published as the second volume in the series English Political Leaders in 1882) and Cicero (intended for Blackwood's 1870s series of Ancient Classics for English Readers, but eventually published by Chapman & Hall in 1880); and London Tradesmen (originally published as a series of eleven articles in the Pall Mall Gazette from July to September, 1880). $500.00 51. NORTH AMERICA. In two volumes. Pp. [viii]+304+[iv]+300; bottom fore-corner of upper board Volume II slightly bruised; dust wrappers; pp. 96-7 slightly soiled Volume II; Granville Publishing, 1986. *Originally published in May 1862. The text here is that of the third English edition, published by Chapman & Hall in 1862, but the appendices (which contained the Declaration of Independence, the Articles of Confederation, and the United States' Constitution) have been omitted. In his Introduction, Trollope declared that 'It has been the ambition of my literary life to write a book about the United States'. $75.00 52. THE NOVELS OF ANTHONY TROLLOPE. In 48 volumes, totalling over 20,000 pages, all volumes with an Introduction (by various contributors) and a Note on the text, 12 of the volumes illustrated (reproducing illustrations by Millais, Phiz, Marcus Stone, and others, from the original editions), the Autobiography volume with frontispiece portrait and index; all volumes uniformly bound in brown cloth, the spines blocked in black and lettered & decorated in gilt, with the monogram of the Trollope Society in blind at centre of boards, a couple of volumes very slightly marked; top edges brown; a few pages in The Landleaguers slightly creased; Omnium Publishing for The Trollope Society, n.d.[late 1990s]. *The Trollope Society Edition of the Novels of Anthony Trollope includes his autobiography. The setting and several of the Introductions are from the Folio Society edition of Trollope's novels. Series editor for the Trollope Society edition was Professor David Skilton. The Introductions are by various modern authors and critics including Robertson Davies, Antonia Fraser, N. John Hall, John Halperin, P. D. James, John Mortimer, Ruth Rendell, and Joanna Trollope. $2,500.00 53. ORLEY FARM. With 39 illustrations by J. E. Millais. In two volumes. Pp. [vi]+320+320, 40 plates (including frontispiece to both volumes); nineteenth century half calf, spines ruled in gilt between raised bands, gilt lettered maroon leather title and volume labels, the calf lightly marked and worn, marbled papered boards, rubbed, edges worn; speckled edges; without a title page to Volume II (see footnote), both volumes lacking half-titles, hinges cracked, some light foxing, soiling, and damp staining, a couple of small marginal splits in Volume II; Chapman & Hall, 1866. Probably a mixed set (as often) of a reprint of the first edition in book form. [See Sadleir 13]. *Orley Farm originally appeared in twenty shilling parts, published monthly from March 1861 to October 1862. In book form, it was first published in 1862, and was reprinted at least twice in its original [two volume] form, though no statement of reimpression was made. The unsold sheets of the final octavo printing were bound up in one volume, and issued at twelve shillings, with a title page specially printed [see Sadleir p. 44]. This copy is probably one of those, ie, a one volume set from the unsold sheets, but rebound in two volumes, as it includes the changed title page, later date (1866), plus the contents and list of illustrations for both volumes found in Volume I, and no title page in Volume II. The second Volume is possibly a later issue than the first. Volume I includes the change of placement of the two plates noted for Sadleir's second issue, but is a later printing than that, as the caption punctuation has been restored at p. 73 and the position changes have been incorporated into the list of illustrations. Volume II corresponds to Sadleir's third issue, with the title and placement change of the final plate, captioned Sir Peregrine Orme's Great Love, and at p. 311 — but the original caption and pagination is retained in the list of illustrations in Volume I. Sadleir's notes, pp. 39-41, describe the problem of distinguishing later issues of the first edition of Orley Farm as 'abnormal'. This set from the library of the Parliament of Victoria, with their small shelf label and gilt stamp on spines, plus larger gilt stamp at centre of upper boards, inked acquisition number in Volume II, and a couple of stamps on outer leaves. $500.00 54. PHINEAS FINN, The Irish Member. With illustrations by J. E. Millais. Pp. vi+570 (last blank), frontispiece plus 3 plates; gilt lettered red/brown cloth, lightly soiled and worn, rebacked, with the original gilt lettered and decorated spine (the gilt faded and dulled) laid down; hinges strengthened, occasional slight soiling and creasing, a few small edge chips and splits, plus a little minor pencilling; Strahan, 1870. First cheap edition [or reprint with same date?] *Originally serialized in Saint Paul's Magazine, from October 1867 to May 1869, then published in book form by Virtue in 1869 (with 20 illustrations by Millais). [Sadleir 30, footnote: 'Phineas Finn was never reprinted in its original two-volume form. The first cheap edition was published by Strahan during the early summer of 1870. It was in one volume, priced at six shillings and contained the illustrations published in the first edition. In 1871 PF was taken over by Chapman & Hall who added it (as a "double vol.") to their "yellow back" Select Library of Fiction. Also in 1871, Routledge, having acquired the unsold stock of first edition sheets, published an edition, two-volumes-in-one ,wi t hi l l u s t r a t i ons …'Thi sc opyonl y has 4 illustrations, with no sign of any others and no list of illustrations to check.] $250.00 55. RALPH THE HEIR. With illustrations by F. A. Fraser. Pp. iv+434, frontispiece plus 17 plates; nineteenth century half dark brown calf, neatly rebacked, with the original gilt lettered and ruled spine (worn) laid down, marbled papered boards, lightly rubbed, the corner tips repaired, edges lightly worn; signature and date (October 1871) on upper free endpaper, hinges strengthened, a little light foxing and soiling, with a few minor damp stains, several pages vertically creased (probably from folding of the original parts); Strahan & Co., 1871. First edition, bound from the [regular] monthly parts, with stab holes occasionally visible, and with the 24 page final signature U. Sadleir 37, Part Issue A. *Ralph the Heir originally appeared in nineteen sixpenny parts, published monthly by Strahan & Co. from January 1870 to July 1871, with all but the final part containing one full page illustration by F. A. Fraser. Only eleven of these illustrations were reproduced in the first octavo book edition, although all appeared in the second book edition and in the first American book edition. Simultaneously with the sixpenny monthly parts, Ralph the Heir also appeared as a Supplement to the Saint Paul's Magazine (but with a slight variation from the sixpenny parts in the signature compostion of the final part). Sadleir devotes several pages (see especially pp. 298-299) to explaining his belief that the regular [sixpenny] Part-Issue precedes the Supplement Issue, and states (pp. 299-300): 'With such a history, it is not surprising that the regular part-issue of Ralph the Heir is of the utmost rarity. I have no price quotation of any kind and only know for certain of two sets in existence. Of course others must survive, and time and demand will call them out. But they will never be numerous.' $1,500.00 56. SIR HARRY HOTSPUR OF HUMBLETHWAITE. Introduction by John Halperin. Series Editor N. John Hall. Pp. [xvii]+viii+234(last blank)+[2](list of titles); gilt lettered dark green cloth; bookseller's sticker at foot of upper pastedown; Arno Press, New York, 1981. Selected works of Anthony Trollope series. *Originally serialized in Macmillan's Magazine from May to December 1870, then published in book form by Hurst & Blackett in November of the same year (but with the title page dated 1871). $35.00 57. SOUTH AFRICA. A reprint of the 1878 edition, with an Introduction and notes by J. H. Davidson. Pp. [viii]+504, full page map, appendices, index; small cr. 4to; qr. art. leather, spine lettered in gilt, brown papered boards; top edges brown; dust wrapper, a trifle soiled, with tiny split to top edge of back panel; A. A. Balkema, Cape Town, 1973. South African Biographical and Historical Studies series, No. 14. *Trollope visited South Africa in 1877, during a period of turmoil. Imperial Britain had conceived a confederation scheme for South Africa, and had annexed the Transvaal a few months earlier, while the Gaika-Gcaleka War broke out a few weeks after Trollope passed through the Eastern Province. Originally published in two volumes in 1878, this new edition — the first to be prepared by comparing the published text with the original manuscript — includes background notes, a new introduction, and an index. $75.00 58. THE STRUGGLES OF BROWN, JONES, AND ROBINSON. By one of the Firm. Introduction by N. John Hall. Series Editor N. John Hall. Pp. [xvi]+iv+254+[2](list of titles), double sided frontispiece plus 2 plates; gilt lettered dark green cloth; bookseller's sticker at foot of upper pastedown; Arno Press, New York, 1981. Selected works of Anthony Trollope series. *Originally serialized in the Cornhill Magazine from August 1861 to March 1862, then first published in an unauthorized American edition by Harper, in 1862. $35.00 59. TALES OF ALL COUNTRIES. Pp. [iv]+404(last blank); f'cap. 8vo; rebound in half calf, with later gilt lettered black leather title label on spine, marbled papered boards, lightly rubbed, the corners and spine slightly worn; all edges sprinkled red; hinges starting, pastedowns lightly offset, scattered light foxing and occasional slight soiling; Chapman & Hall, 1873. New edition. *Contains seventeen stories, all originally published in various periodicals, eight of which were first collected in book form as Tales of All Countries [First series] in 1861 [see Sadleir 12]; with the remaining nine appearing as Tales of All Countries, Second Series in 1863 [Sadleir 16]. This 'New edition' could be a reprint of the 1866 first one volume edition, which was issued in two formats including a 'yellow back'. [See Sadleir 16, notes, pp. 50-51]. $350.00 60. THE THREE CLERKS. In three volumes. Introduction by Asa Briggs. Series Editor N. John Hall. Pp. [xx]+iv+340+[2](list of titles)+[vi]+322+[2](list of titles)+[iv]+iv+334+[2 (list of titles); gilt lettered dark green cloth; Arno Press, New York, 1981. Selected works of Anthony Trollope series. *Originally published by Richard Bentley in November 1857 (with an 1858 title page). $100.00 61. THE TIRELESS TRAVELLER. Twenty letters to the Liverpool Mercury by Anthony Trollope, 1875. Edited, with an Introduction, by Bradford Allen Booth. Pp. xii+222(last blank); red cloth, lettered and decorated in gilt; price-clipped dust wrapper, slightly soiled, edges lightly rubbed and split, with small tear to top edge of back panel tape repaired on reverse; free endpapers faintly offset; University of California Press, Berkeley, Ca., 1941. *Collection of articles written by Trollope during his second trip to Australia, in 1875. $60.00 62. TRAVELLING SKETCHES. Introduction by Asa Briggs. Series Editor N. John Hall. Pp. [xx]+112+[2](list of titles); gilt lettered dark green cloth; Arno Press, New York, 1981. Selected works of Anthony Trollope series. *Sketches which first appeared in the Pall Mall Gazette, then published in book form by Chapman & Hall in 1866. $35.00 63. TROLLOPE THE TRAVELLER. Selections from Anthony Trollope's travel writings. Edited with an Introduction by Graham Handley. Pp. xxxvi+250(last blank), notes; dust wrapper, top edge and backstrip faintly faded, back panel a trifle soiled; William Pickering, 1993. First edition thus. *Extracts from The West Indies and the Spanish Main; North America; Australia and New Zealand; and South Africa. In 1858 Trollope was sent by the GPO to negotiate a postal treaty in Egypt. From there he visited Palestine, returning home via Malta, Gibraltar and Spain. In the same year he travelled to the West Indies, and in 1859 completed the first of his travel books. In 1861 Trollope was in America, and in 1871 he and his wife sailed to Australia to visit their son. In 1877 he travelled throughout South Africa. $45.00 64. THE WARDEN. Illustrated by Phyllis Harrap. Pp. 208, coloured frontispiece and 11 plates, black & white text illustrations; cr. 4to; edges and spine slightly faded; price-clipped dust wrapper, lightly soiled and foxed, the edges quite torn and chipped with pieces torn from head and foot of backstrip and top edge of front panel; bookseller's ink stamp on upper free endpaper, a little light foxing, the free endpapers faintly offset; Harrap, 1949. First edition with these illustrations. $175.00 65. THE WEST INDIES AND THE SPANISH MAIN. Pp. [iv]+iv+396(last blank), frontispiece map; green cloth, lettered and decorated in gilt, the edges and spine faded, with light bruise to top edge of upper board near spine; first few leaves faintly creased; Frank Cass, 1968. Cass Library of West Indian Studies, No. 2. *Originally published in 1859, this is a facsimile reproduction of the second edition, published by Chapman & Hall, London, 1860. The West Indies and the Spanish Main was Trollope's first travel book. $75.00 66. WHY FRAU FROHMANN RAISED HER PRICES, AND OTHER STORIES. Introduction by Reginald Terry. Series Editor N. John Hall. Pp. [xiv]+viii+416+[2](list of titles); gilt lettered dark green cloth; first couple of leaves slightly creased; Arno Press, New York, 1981. Selected works of Anthony Trollope series. *Originally published by W. Isbister, London, in 1882, the year of Trollope's death. $35.00 67. WRITINGS FOR SAINT PAUL'S MAGAZINE. Introduction by John Sutherland. Series Editor N. John Hall. Pp. [xxiv]+8+[268](each article individually paginated)+[2](list of titles); med. 8vo; gilt lettered dark green cloth; Arno Press, New York, 1981. Selected works of Anthony Trollope series. *Trollope's essays for the magazine he himself edited are here collected for the first time, reproduced with the original pagination. $35.00 68. BRITISH SPORTS AND PASTIMES. Edited by Anthony Trollope. Pp. [vi]+322; gilt lettered green cloth, slightly soiled and worn; later endpapers; lower hinge tender, small piece torn from top fore-corner pp. 123/4, tiny chip to top edge pp. 299/300, a little light foxing and scattered slight soiling; Virtue, n.d.[1868]. First edition, later issue? [See Sadleir P4]; Padwick 7058 (Cricket). *Apart from the Preface (which was specially written by Trolllope for book issue) the essays contained in this volume were originally published in St. Paul's Magazine. Includes On hunting by Trollope; On Horse Racing and On Shooting by the Hon. Francis Lawley; On Rowing and On Alpine Climbing by Leslie Stephen; On Fishing by Dr. Bertram; On Yachting by Edward Piggott; and On Cricket by Charles Merewether. This copy does not correspond exactly to any issue noted by Sadleir. See his note, p. 18: 'Though never actually reprinted, British Sports & Pastimes had many adventures as a candidate for cheap edition and remainder success. No other item in Trollopiana appears in so many different cloths without the indication of there having been earlier issues. …' The binding of this copy matches Sadleir's 3rd reissue [slightly cut down in size to cr. 8vo], green cloth, with the imprint of Strahan & Co. at foot of spine, and no title on upper board, but he calls for a new title page with restored dates, which are not present here. $550.00 Part Two: The Writings of Mrs. Frances Trollope and Thomas Adolphus Trollope Mrs. Frances Trollope (1780-1863)—Mother of Anthony Trollope 69. CHARLES CHESTERFIELD; OR, THE ADVENTURES OF A YOUTH OF GENIUS. Pp. [iv]+392; nineteenth century half calf, rebacked, with the original gilt lettered and decorated spine (worn) laid down, marbled papered boards, lightly rubbed, new corner tips; armorial bookplate on upper pastedown, the hinges strengthened, a little light foxing and a few small marginal damp stains; A. & W. Galignani, Paris, 1842. *Originally published in three volumes by Colburn, in 1841. [See Sadleir 3217; Wolff 6808]. This copy possibly lacking advertisements? $500.00 70. FATHER EUSTACE: A TALE OF THE JESUITS. In three volumes. Pp. [ii]+344+[ii] +332(last blank)+[ii]+326; early red half calf, the spines lettered and ruled in gilt, marbled papered boards, lightly rubbed, edges worn, the spines faded and slightly grazed, the extremities a trifle chipped, upper joint tender Volume III; all edges sprinkled red; hinges starting Volume III, small ownership label on upper pastedowns and one upside down on the lower pastedown of Volumes II and III, a little light foxing and occasional slight soiling; Henry Colburn, 1847. First edition. Sadleir 3220; Wolff 6811. *Bound without the 24 page publisher's catalogue at the end of Volume III. Two of the ownership labels are that of Lady Williams, Bodelwyddan [probably Lady Sarah Williams (died 1876), the wife of Sir John Hay Williams, of Bodelwyddan]; the others, one of which is laid over Lady Williams' label, are address labels only (Rangemoor, Prestatyn, N. Wales — perhaps another of Sir John Williams' estates). $2,000.00 71. JESSIE PHILLIPS. A tale of the present day. Pp. viii+352, engraved frontispiece portrait [by J. Browne] with tissue guard, plus 11 plates by Leech; red cloth, boards decorated in blind, slightly soiled, corners a trifle bruised, rebacked, with all but the extremities of the original gilt lettered and decorated spine laid down; top edges uncut, a few leaves carelessly opened; hinges strengthened, book of German artist Fritz Reiss (1857-1915) on upper pastedown, plus his inked signature (dated 1883) on the upper free endpaper, scattered light foxing and occasional slight soiling, a few small edge chips or splits; Henry Colburn, 1844. First book edition in one volume, variant cloth. Sadleir 3223b [calling for sage green cloth]; Wolff 6814a. *Lacking the sixteen pages of advertisements at end called for by Wolff. Originally published in three volumes in 1843. Wolff notes that the sub-title of the book edition differs from that of the part edition (which was sub-titled 'A tale of the new poor-law'). He adds that 'There may well be some significance in this deliberate broadening of the social attack away from the enactment toward conditions generally'. $1,800.00 72. THE LIFE AND ADVENTURES OF JONATHAN JEFFERSON WHITLAW; OR SCENES ON THE MISSISSIPPI. With fifteen engravings. In three volumes. Pp. [iv]+328(last colophon)+[ii]+332(last colophon)+[ii]+348, 15 engraved plates by A. Hervieu (including frontispiece to each volume); recent qr. red cloth, the spines lettered and decorated in gilt, early brown papered boards and red leather corners, the boards rubbed, with a couple of small surface grazes, edges (especially corners) worn; later marbled endpapers; hinges tender at a couple of points, with short split to bottom edge of frontispiece Volume I, scattered foxing (heaviest on plates and outer leaves), the plates offset, 3 small newscuttings laid down through Volume I; Richard Bentley, 1836. First edition. Sadleir 3224; Wolff 6817. *An early antislavery novel, pre-dating Uncle Tom's Cabin by several years. Volumes II & III (but not Volume I) should have half-title pages, which are not present in this set. $750.00 73. THE LIFE AND ADVENTURES OF MICHAEL ARMSTRONG, THE FACTORY BOY. Pp. viii+388(last blank), 24 plates (by Hervieu, Buss, and Onwhyn); nineteenth century red half calf, the spine decorated in gilt compartments, with gilt lettered and decorated black leather title label (which is slightly chipped at edges), marbled papered boards, rubbed, edges lightly worn, the spine faded to brown, slightly grazed; upper hinge starting, binder's ticket of T. P. Baily, Cirencester, at foot of upper pastedown, early ownership inscription on blank preliminary, scattered foxing (heavier on plates, especially at edges); Henry Colburn, 1840. First book edition in one volume, with the same illustrations as the parts issue. Sadleir 3228b; Wolff 6818b. *This copy lacking the publisher's catalogue and advertisements at end and a preliminary leaf listing the illustrations (presumably discarded during binding). Originally issued in twelve monthly parts from March 1839 to February of the following year; then first published in book form in three volumes, December 1839 (dated 1840). In the Preface, the author announces her intention to 'drag into the light of day, and place before the eyes of Englishmen, the hideous mass of injustice and suffering to which thousands of infant labourers are subjected, who toil in our monster spinning-mills.' $600.00 74. VIENNA AND THE AUSTRIANS; With some account of a journey through Swabia, Bavaria, the Tyrol, and the Salzbourg. In two volumes. Pp. [iii]-xviii+388+[iii]+420(last blank), 12 plates by Hervieu (including frontispiece with tissue guard both volumes), plus vignette title pages; nineteenth century half calf, the spines lettered and ruled in gilt and decorated in blind, marbled papered boards, lightly worn, the corner tips and joints repaired; a little light foxing and soiling, occasional marginal damp stains; Richard Bentley, 1838. First edition. Sadleir 3247; Wolff 6836. *Lacking half-title pages (presumably discarded during binding). $600.00 75. THE WIDOW BARNABY. In three volumes. Pp. [iv]+348+[iv]+380+[iv]+358; rebound in modern half calf, the spines ruled in gilt with gilt lettered maroon leather title labels, earlier marbled papered boards, lightly rubbed, edges slightly worn; top edges brown, others sprinkled red; new endpapers; pp. 145/6 loosening Volume II, occasional light foxing and soiling, pages faintly browned; Richard Bentley, 1839[1838?]. First edition. Sadleir 3250; Wolff 6839. *Sadleir notes 'An unusual feature of this novel is that the price — twenty-four shillings — is printed under the imprint on each title'. In his section on Comparative scarcities, he begins his notes on Mrs. Trollope by stating 'It is phenomenal to find in bookshops fine copies of any of the unillustrated novels of Mrs. Trollope — and indeed unusual to see copies of any kind'. He also notes that The Widow Barnaby, 'the first of the Barnaby trilogy (the only unillustrated one) is the rarest' [Sadleir, XIX Century Fiction, p. 383]. According to Wolff, the Bentley Private Catalogue dates publication of this novel as December 26, 1838. $1,500.00 76. THE WIDOW MARRIED; A sequel to "The Widow Barnaby". With numerous illustrations. In three volumes. Pp. [iv]+324+[ii]+344(last colophon)+[ii]+330, 21 plates (including frontispiece to each volume) by R. W. Buss; nineteenth century calf, with gilt lettered contrasting red and dark green title & volume labels on spines, the boards with decorative blind tooled border, spines ruled in gilt and decorated in blind, the corner tips and spine extremities neatly repaired, edges and spines slightly rubbed; marbled edges; armorial bookplate (of [John] Gordon of Aikenhead) on upper pastedowns, the hinges strengthened, a little light foxing (heavier on plates), a couple of tiny edge splits; Henry Colburn, 1840. First edition. Sadleir 3251 (calling for glazed yellow endpapers); Wolff 6840. *Lacking the 8 page publisher's catalogue at front of Volume I, and the 10 advertisements pages at end of Volume III - both presumably discarded during binding. $2,500.00 77. THE WIDOW WEDDED; OR, ADVENTURES OF THE BARNABYS IN AMERICA. With illustrations on steel by John Leech. Pp. [iv]+344+[4](advertisements), frontispiece with tissue guard, plus 8 plates by Leech; original dull green cloth, the boards decorated in blind, rebacked, with the original gilt lettered and decorated spine (which is chipped at extremities) laid down, corners of boards lightly bruised, the cloth a trifle rubbed; uncut; hinges strengthened, binder's ticket at foot of lower pastedown, a little light foxing and occasional soiling; Ward & Lock, n.d.[c.1858?]. One volume edition. *Originally published in three volumes by Colburn, in 1843, under the title The Barnabys in America, or adventures of the widow wedded. [See Sadleir 3214; Wolff 6806]. $400.00 Thomas Adolphus Trollope (1810-1892)—Elder brother of Athony Trollope 78. DIAMOND CUT DIAMOND. Pp. 298+8(publisher's catalogue)+[6](advertisements); brown cloth, ruled in black, spine lettered and decorated in gilt, upper board lettered in black, the boards slightly canted, slightly marked and rubbed, edges lightly worn; fore and bottom edges uncut; brown endpapers; traces of [preliminary blank?] removed before half-title, the hinges starting, a little light foxing and occasional soiling; Harper, New York, 1874. First edition. Sadleir 3269, calling for green cloth. $350.00 79. GARSTANG GRANGE. A novel. Pp. [17]-398(last blank)+[2](advertisements, dated 1871); brown cloth, boards decorated in blind, lightly worn, corners a trifle bruised, neatly rebacked, with the original gilt lettered and decorated spine (chipped at extremities) laid down; a little light foxing, soiling, and minor wear & tear, including a few small edge chips; T. B. Peterson & Brothers, Philadelphia, n.d.[c.1880?]. Stereotype edition. *First published in three volumes by Smith, Elder, as The Garstangs of Garstang Grange in 1869. [see Sadleir 3272; Wolff 6856]. *The pagination is odd, but the text is complete. The publisher, Theophilus Beasley Peterson, was born in Philadelphia, in February, 1821. He left school at the age of thirteen, to work as a clerk in a dry-goods store, before entering a stereotype-foundry. In 1843 he became foreman in the office of the Saturday Evening Post, which was edited by George R. Graham and Charles J. Peterson. Two years afterward he began business for himself as a bookseller and news-agent. His first publication was issued in 1846, being a reprint of Lady Charlotte Bury's novel The Divorced. The price of the London edition was $7.50; Peterson's edition cost twenty-five cents. His success in this effort confirmed him in his original resolution to stereotype all the most popular foreign and American books of fiction of which he could gain possession, and publish them in economical forms. In 1858 he admitted his brothers, George W. & Thomas, into partnership, [as] T. B. Peterson and Brothers. $120.00 80. THE STORY OF THE LIFE OF PIUS THE NINTH. Pp. viii+360, appendix; purple cloth over bevelled boards, lettered and decorated in gilt, rubbed and slightly soiled, professionally rebacked, with all but the extremities of the original spine retained; the hinges strengthened, lower free endpaper creased, the pages browned, occasional slight soiling; Craig & Taylor, Detroit, 1877. First U.S. edition. *Published in the U.K. in the same year. $120.00 81. WHAT I REMEMBER. In three volumes. Pp. viii+408(last blank)+viii+404+[4] (advertisements)+[iv]+424(last colophon), frontispiece portrait with tissue guard Volume I, frontispiece with tissue guard Volume III, title pages printed in red & black, indices; brown cloth, the spines lettered in gilt, boards ruled in blind, lightly marked and rubbed, corners bruised, the spine extremities (each volume) and joints (Volume III) neatly repaired; top edges uncut; armorial bookplate (of C. R. R. Malone — presumably the Cornish Colonel of that name) on upper pastedown and bookseller's sticker at foot of lower pastedown of first two volumes, hinges tender at a couple of points, a little minor inked marginalia in Volume I, scattered light foxing, occasional soiling, and minor wear & tear; Richard Bentley, 1887; 1889. First editions. *The autobiography of Anthony Trollope's elder brother. Loosely inserted in the first volume, within an envelope, is a small slip of paper, inscribed 'Always, my dear Sir, Very faithfully yours' and signed by the author. The third volume, which is subtitled The Further Reminiscences of Mr. T. A. Trollope, was published separately, in 1889. $800.00 Part Three:Trollopiana 82. apRoberts (Ruth) TROLLOPE: ARTIST AND MORALIST. Pp. 204(last blank), index; fore-corners of upper board slightly bruised; price-clipped dust wrapper, slightly soiled, backstrip faded, edges a trifle rubbed and split; small surface graze to upper free endpaper, the free endpapers faintly offset; Chatto & Windus, 1971. First edition. $30.00 83. Arnold (Ralph) THE WHISTON MATTER. The Reverend Robert Whiston versus the Dean and Chapter of Rochester. Pp. 214(last blank), frontispiece portrait, plus 4 plates, pictorial endpapers; bottom fore-corner of boards a trifle bruised; top edges yellow; dust wrapper, edges lightly rubbed and split, the back panel very slightly soiled; a little light foxing; Hart-Davis, 1961. First edition. *'Trollopians will recall that the Whiston case was one of the two resounding clerical scandals which provided the plot for The Warden' [wrapper blurb]. Robert Whiston was the headmaster of the Rochester Cathedral Grammar School, who challenged the Chapter's interpretation of their statutory obligations. His pamphlet, Cathedral Trusts and their Fulfilment, led to his dismissal from office — a verdict he fought in the courts and by appealing to the Bishop of Rochester. The dispute lasted from 1848 to 1853. Trollope studied the newspaper reports of the case, and wrote The Warden between the summer of 1852 and the autumn of 1853. $30.00 84. Ayres (Brenda) Editor. FRANCES TROLLOPE AND THE NOVEL OF SOCIAL CHANGE. Pp. xvi+200(last blank), full page illustrations, notes, bibliography, index; med. 8vo; boards a trifle marked; Greenwood Press, Westport, Connecticut, 2002. First edition. Contributions in Women's Studies, Number 192. *Chapters include 'Fair, Fat and Forty': Social Redress and Fanny Trollope's Literary Activism, by Ann-Barbara Graff; and Marriageable at Midlife: The Remarrying Widows of Frances Trollope and Anthony Trollope, by Kay Heath. $45.00 while embodying the male-centred values of Victorian culture, also creates a powerful, subtle indictment of the exploitations of women in that society' [wrapper blurb]. $45.00 88. Bell (Arnold Craig) A GUIDE TO TROLLOPE. Pp. 206, indices; pictorial glazed paper wrappers; Merlin Books, Braunton, Devon, 1989. First U.K. edition. *A detailed account of each of Trollope's novels in chronological order, together with details of their plots, characters and background. $20.00 89. Bigland (Eileen) THE INDOMITABLE MRS. TROLLOPE. Pp. 220(last blank), double sided frontispiece, bibliography, index; price-clipped dust wrapper, edges slightly rubbed, with short closed tear to top edge of back panel; top edges of leaves a trifle foxed; Barrie & Jenkins, 1970. Reissued. *Originally published in 1953. $35.00 90. Bloom (Harold) Editor. ANTHONY TROLLOPE'S BARCHESTER TOWERS AND THE WARDEN. Pp. viii+182(last blank), chronology, bibliography, index; med. 8vo; dust wrapper; Chelsea House Publishers, New York, 1988. Modern Critical Interpretations series. *Collection of studies on various aspects of the first two volumes in Trollope's Chronicles of Barsetshire. Includes an introduction by Harold Bloom, and Mr. Harding's Church Music, by Sherman Hawkins. $40.00 91. Bowen (Elizabeth) ANTHONY TROLLOPE: A NEW JUDGEMENT. Pp. [vi]+38 (last colophon, verso blank), the frontispiece portrait, full page illustration, text map, full page facsimile, and title and text decorations all printed in brown, bibliography; f'cap. 8vo; marbled papered boards, the upper board blocked in black and lettered in light brown and grey/green, the spine slightly chipped and split; Oxford University Press, New York, 1946. First U.S. edition. *A short one-act play by Bowen, featuring Trollope as one of the characters. $50.00 92. Brown (Beatrice Curtis) ANTHONY TROLLOPE. Pp. 107+[5](advertisements, last blank), index; gilt lettered red cloth, spine slightly faded; bookseller's sticker at foot of upper pastedown, inked ownership inscription on upper free endpaper, the upper free endpaper faintly offset (from loosely inserted newscuttings); Arthur Barker, 1950. First edition. The English Novelists series. $20.00 93. Bury (Laurent) SEDUCTIVE STRATEGIES IN THE NOVELS OF ANTHONY TROLLOPE (1815-1882). Pp. [viii]+iv+304+[3](advertisements), bibliography, index; pictorial cloth, slight bruise to lower board near spine; The Edwin Mellen Press, Lewiston, New York, 2004. First U.S. edition. Studies in British Literature Volume 86. $50.00 85. Bareham (T.) Editor. ANTHONY TROLLOPE. Pp. 208(last blank), index; dust wrapper, edges a trife rubbed, the back panel slightly soiled; pp. 205/6 slightly creased; Vision Press, 1980. First edition. Vision Critical Studies series. *Contributors include Walter Allen and John Halperin. $35.00 94. Bury (Laurent) Editor. STUDIES IN ANTHONY TROLLOPE. Pp. 144(last blank) +[6[(advertisements), text mainly in English (with occasional French); pictorial glazed paper wrappers; Universite Paul Valery, Montpellier, 2003. Cahiers Victoriens et Edouardiens, No. 58. $30.00 86. Bareham (T.) Editor. TROLLOPE: THE BARSETSHIRE NOVELS. The Warden; Barchester Towers; Doctor Thorne; Framley Parsonage; The Small House at Allington; The Last Chronicle of Barset; A Casebook. Pp. xxx+216(last blank), select bibliography, indices; dust wrapper; Macmillan, 1983. First edition. Casebook series. *Collection of critical essays by Elizabeth Bowen, Pamela Hansford Johnson, Arthur Quiller-Couch, and others. $30.00 95. Chuck (Thomas) A REPLY TO MR. ANTHONY TROLLOPE BY THOMAS CHUCK. 1877. [Cover title] "One story is good till another is told", or a reply to Mr. Anthony Trollope, on that part of his work, entitled "Australia and New Zealand", relating to the colony of Victoria. Pp. 48, photocopied; small square 4to; navy binder's cloth, the upper board lettered in gilt; The Silverbridge Press, 1989. *This copy bound for Lance O. Tingay. Originally privately published in Liverpool, New South Wales, in 1877 [see Ferguson 8187]. The author, Thomas Foster Chuck, arrived in Melbourne in the middle of the century, and opened a photographic studio in the Royal Arcade, Melbourne, in 1864. His intention in publishing this 'lecture' was 'to explain some of the mistakes Mr. Trollope has been led into by biased or 87. Barickman (Richard), Susan MacDonald, & Myra Stark. CORRUPT RELATIONS. Dickens, Thackeray, Trollope, Collins, and the Victorian sexual system. Pp. xiv+286(last blank), notes, selected bibliography, index; dust wrapper, backstrip faded; Columbia University Press, New York, 1982. First edition. *'Looks closely at four male Victorian writers traditionally viewed as benighted anti-feminists and argues that their work, simple informants, and to correct those statements that need correcting' — particularly regarding the Victorian section of Trollope's book. $120.00 96. Clark (John W.) THE LANGUAGE AND STYLE OF ANTHONY TROLLOPE. Pp. 238; fore-corners of lower board slightly bruised; dust wrapper; bookplate on upper pastedown; Deutsch, 1975. First edition. The Language Library series. *Includes chapters on Trollope's grammar; use of non-standard dialects; and one on Slang, profanity, euphemisms, and terms of address and reference. $30.00 97. Cockshut (A. O. J.) ANTHONY TROLLOPE: A CRITICAL STUDY. Pp. 256, frontispiece portrait, appendix, bibliography, index; price-clipped dust wrapper, slightly soiled, edges a trifle rubbed; Collins, 1968. Second printing. *First published in 1955. $30.00 98. Daniels (Mary L.) Compiler. TROLLOPE-TO-READER. A topical guide to digressions in the novels of Anthony Trollope. Pp. xxii+394, bibliographical notes, index; med. 8vo; grey cloth, lettered in white; edges of leaves a trifle marked; Greenwood Press, Westport, Connecticut, 1983. First edition. $125.00 99. Davies (Hugh Sykes) TROLLOPE. Pp. 40(last blank), frontispiece portrait, select bibliography; printed paper wrappers, stapled, backstrip lightly rubbed and faded; Longmans, Green, 1967. Reprinted. Writers and their Work No. 118. Bibliographical Series of Supplements to 'British Book News' on Writers and their work. *First published 1960. $15.00 100. Davitt (Ellen) FORCE AND FRAUD. Introduction by Lucy Sussex. Pp. vi+x+144(last colophon), frontispiece, notes; roy. 8vo; pictorial glazed paper wrappers, a trifle rubbed; Mulini Press, Canberra, 1993. First edition in book form. Australian Books on Demand No. 6. *A murder mystery tale set in the Australian bush, originally published as a serial in The Australian Journal in 1865. Possibly the first murder mystery published in Australia, 'Force and Fraud's most striking feature is that it begins with a murder, only solved at the end of the book, a narrative form which anticipates later developments in the mystery novel' [wrapper blurb]. The author, Ellen Davitt, and her husband Arthur were pioneer educationalists, who ran the Model School in East Melbourne during the 1850s. Ellen Davitt was also an artist (the frontispiece to this volume reproduces one of her drawings), and the sister-in-law of Anthony Trollope. (Ellen was the eldest daughter of Edward and Martha Heseltine, whose fourth daughter, Rose, married Trollope in 1844). $35.00 101. Dewey (Clive) THE PASSING OF BARCHESTER. Pp. xx+200(last blank), frontispiece, 16 plates, tables, appendix, notes, bibliography, index; med. 8vo; top edge of lower board bumped near centre, top fore-corners bruised; dust wrapper; The Hambledon Press, 1991. First edition. *Study of William Rowe Lyall, 'a Victorian Dean of Canterbury who appointed eight of his immediate relatives to benefices. The careers, marriages, houses, incomes and attitudes of an intriguing group of Trollopean personalities' [wrapper blurb]. $40.00 102. Edwards (P. D.) ANTHONY TROLLOPE: HIS ART AND SCOPE. Pp. xii+234, appendices, index; bottom edge of boards lightly shelf-worn; dust wrapper, backstrip faintly faded, corners a trifle rubbed; University of Queensland Press, St. Lucia, 1977. First edition. $35.00 103. Edwards (P. D.) ANTHONY TROLLOPE'S SON IN AUSTRALIA. The life and letters of F. J. A. Trollope (1847-1910). Pp. [vi]+70(last blank), full page map, notes, index; dust wrapper; pages slightly browned; University of Queensland Press, St. Lucia, 1982. First edition. *The story of Frederic James Anthony Trollope, the novelist's younger son, based on letters he wrote from Australia to members of his family in England. $30.00 104. Ellis (Linda Abess) FRANCIS TROLLOPE'S AMERICA. Four novels. Pp. xiv+158, selected bibliography, index; printed glazed papered boards; Peter Lang, New York, 1993. First edition. American University Studies, Series IV, English Language and Literature, Volume 145. *Study of the four novels Frances Trollope wrote based on her experiences in America (The Refugee in America; Jonathan Jefferson Whitlaw; The Barnabys in America; and The Old World and the New), exploring the technical and artistic descisions she made when fictionalizing those experiences. $40.00 105. Emmerich (Janet) ANTHONY TROLLOPE: HIS PERCEPTION OF CHARACTER AND THE TRAUMATIC EXPERIENCE. Pp. x+62(last blank), notes, bibliography, index; printed stiff paper wrappers, backstrip and top edge of upper wrapper slightly faded; University Press of America, Washington, D.C., 1980. First edition, paperback. *An examination of three of Trollope's best known characters: Bishop and Mrs. Proudie (Barchester Towers); and Lily Dale (The Small House at Allington and The Last Chronicle of Barset). $25.00 106. Epperly (Elizabeth R.) ANTHONY TROLLOPE'S NOTES ON THE OLD DRAMA. Pp. 144(last blank), appendices; pictorial paper wrappers; Department of English, University of Victoria, B.C., Canada, 1988. English Literary Studies Monograph Series, No. 42. *Between 1866 and 1882 Trollope read more than 270 Elizabethan and Jacobean plays (including Shakespeare) — often more than once — and made extensive notes in his own copies. Trollope's annotations, reproduced in this volume, can be seen in 96 of the 130 volumes from his collection now owned by the Folger Shakespeare Library in Washington. $30.00 107. Epperly (Elizabeth R.) PATTERNS OF REPETITION IN TROLLOPE. Pp. xii+238, title page vignette, notes, list of works cited, index; dust wrapper; bookseller's sticker at foot of upper pastedown; The Catholic University of America Press, Washington, D.C., 1989. First edition. $45.00 108. Felber (Lynette) GENDER AND GENRE IN NOVELS WITHOUT END. The British Roman-Fleuve. Pp. 206, notes, works cited, index; gilt lettered dark grey cloth; University Press of Florida, Gainesville, 1996. First edition. *Devotes an entire section to Trollope, arguing that 'Trollope developed one of the first identifiable examples of the nineteenth-century British roman-fleuve in his Palliser novels, often mistakenly regarded as merely a serial' [Preface, p xi]. $50.00 109. Field (Kate) SELECTED LETTERS. Edited and with an Introduction by Carolyn J. Moss. Pp. xxxii+256, frontispiece portrait, text illustrations, chronology, appendices, index; med. 8vo; boards a trifle rubbed; Southern Illinois University Press, Carbondale & Edwardsville, 1996. First edition. *Published to coincide with the centennial of Kate Field's death. $30.00 110. Field, Kate: Whiting (Lilian) KATE FIELD. A record. Pp. xii+612(last blank)+[4] (advertisements), 5 plates with lettered guards (2 sepia, including the frontispiece portrait), 2 page facsimile of Kate Field's handwriting, index; olive green cloth, lettered and decorated in gilt, slightly soiled, the spine faded, corners bruised; t.e.g, others uncut; hinges starting, a little light foxing and offsetting; Little, Brown, Boston, 1900. Second printing? *Biography of the American journalist, travel writer, and actor whom Trollope (who met her in 1860) described in his autobiography as 'my most chosen friend'. Kate Field (1838-1896) published an estimated 3000 articles during her career, and is believed to be the model for the character of Henrietta Stackpole in Henry James's The Portrait of a Lady. $50.00 111. Foster (R. F.) PADDY AND MR PUNCH. Connections in Irish and English history. Pp. 382, illustrations, notes, index; dust wrapper; bookseller's sticker at foot of upper paste- down; Allen Lane The Penguin Press, 1993. First edition. *'Explores the patterns of resentment, exploitation, dependence and rejection which were created by centuries of proximity, colonization and emigration. Often seen through the individual experiences of people "caught" between England and Ireland (a varied gallery including Randolph Churchill, Thackeray, Trollope, Yeats, Parnell and the notorious Mrs. O'Shea), these intersections also cut across sub jects like the representation of the Irish in Victorian journalism and fiction, the roots of constitutional nationalist agitation, and the making of literary reputations' [blurb]. $45.00 119. Hall (N. John) & Donald D. Stone. Editors. NINETEENTH-CENTURY FICTION, VOLUME 37, NUMBER 3, DECEMBER 1982. SPECIAL ISSUE: ANTHONY TROLLOPE, 1882-1982. Pp. [ii]+255-496+[12](advertisements); pictorial paper wrappers, slightly soiled, tiny nick to top edge of back panel; University of California Press, Berkeley, 1982. *Special Trollope issue. Articles include Trollope and the Evangelicals, by Arthur Pollard; and Business and Bosoms: Some Trollopian Concerns, by Philip Collins. $40.00 112. Fredman (Alice Green) ANTHONY TROLLOPE. Pp. 48; printed glazed paper wrappers, stapled, a trifle marked; Columbia University Press, New York, 1971. Columbia Essays on Modern Writers, 56. $25.00 120. Hall (N. John) Editor. THE TROLLOPE CRITICS. Pp. xxx+248, notes, selected bibliography, index; dust wrapper, backstrip and top edge of front panel slightly faded; Macmillan, 1981. First U.K. edition. *Contributors include Michael Sadleir, David Cecil, and C. P. Snow. $35.00 113. Gerould (Winifred Gregory) & James Thayer Gerould. A GUIDE TO TROLLOPE. Drawings by Florence W. Ewing. Pp. xxvi+256, 9 full page maps, the title page printed in brown, index; med. 8vo; edges of boards a trifle rubbed, a couple of faded patches to spine; top edges red; price-clipped dust wrapper, backstrip torn, the edges worn and chipped, the back panel slightly soiled and foxed; outer leaves and edges lightly foxed; Oxford University Press, 1948. First U.K. edition. *An alphabetical record of the characters and places in the novels, plus a digest of the plots. The illustrations are sketch maps of some of the regions depicted in the novels. $40.00 121. Halperin (John) EGOISM AND SELF-DISCOVERY IN THE VICTORIAN NOVEL. Studies in the ordeal of knowledge in the nineteenth century. Introduction by Walter Allen. Pp. [vi]+xiv+294, full page illustrations, appendix, index; dust wrapper, slightly rubbed; name and date in ink on upper free endpaper, a little inked underlining; Burt Franklin, New York, 1974. First edition. Studies in Literature and Criticism 1. *'This book marks the first attempt to isolate and examine in detail the process of moral development as a central theme of nineteenth century literature, and of Victorian fiction in particular' [wrapper blurb]. Includes chapters on Trollope, Dickens, Jane Austen, George Eliot, and others. $40.00 114. Glendinning (Victoria) TROLLOPE. Pp. xxii+552(last blank), 24 plates, title page vignette, 4 full page illustrations, notes & sources, list of Trollope's works, index; thick med. 8vo; dust wrapper; bookseller's sticker at foot of upper pastedown; Hutchinson, 1992. $50.00 122. Halperin (John) TROLLOPE AND POLITICS. A study of the Pallisers and others. Pp. x+318, frontispiece portrait, notes, select bibliography of secondary sources, indices; bottom fore-corner of boards a trifle bruised; dust wrapper; Macmillan, 1977. First U.K. edition. *Identifies for the first time contemporary sources of some of the politicians and parliamentary issues which appear in Trollope's political novels. $40.00 115. Guffey (George) & Andrew Wright. TWO ENGLISH NOVELISTS: APHRA BEHN AND ANTHONY TROLLOPE. Papers read at a Clark Library Seminar, May 11, 1974. Pp. [vi]+76, notes, list of William Andrews Clark Memorial Library Seminar Papers; printed paper wrappers, slightly soiled; William Andrews Clark Memorial Library, University of California Press, Los Angeles, 1975. $30.00 116. Hall (N. John) SALMAGUNDI: BYRON, ALLEGRA, AND THE TROLLOPE FAMILY. Pp. xiv+106(last colophon), 16 plates, the title page printed in brown & black, appendix, notes, index; med. 8vo; qr. black art. leather, spine lettered in gilt, brown cloth boards, small fracture to bottom edge of lower board, top edge of boards slightly faded, spine lightly rubbed at extremities; tiny stain to top edge of a few leaves; Beta Phi Mu, Pittsburgh, 1975. First edition. Beta Phi Mu Chapbook Number Eleven. *Includes the text of a manuscript transcribed by the young Anthony Trollope entitled Salmagundi - aliena, 1834, which contains his mother's satirical poem about the burial of Lord Byron's illegitimate daugher Allegra, Lines written by a celebrated authoress; plus three short anonymous poems (two of which the editor suggests may even be Trollope's own). The appendix is Mrs. Trollope's verse drama Signs of the times; or, The righteous rout. $45.00 117. Hall (N. John) TROLLOPE AND HIS ILLUSTRATORS. Pp. xiv+176(last blank), numerous full page illustrations, notes, index; med. 8vo; top edge green; dust wrapper, a trifle rubbed; Macmillan, 1980. First U.K. edition. $80.00 118. Hall (N. John) TROLLOPE. A biography. Pp. xvi+582(last blank), 16 plates, 4 full page illustrations, notes, Trollope family tree, chronological list of Trollope's works, index; med. 8vo; dust wrapper; bookseller's sticker at foot of upper pastedown; Clarendon Press, Oxford, 1991. First U.K. edition. $50.00 123. Halperin (John) Editor. TROLLOPE CENTENARY ESSAYS. Edited by John Halperin. Pp. xvi+192(last blank), index; top edges brown; dust wrapper, a trifle rubbed; bookseller's sticker at foot of upper pastedown, pp. 48/9 slightly soiled; Macmillan, 1982. First edition. *Contributors include Asa Briggs, Arthur Pollard, and A. L. Rowse. $50.00 124. Hamer (Mary) WRITING BY NUMBERS: TROLLOPE'S SERIAL FICTION. Pp. xiv+200(last blank), appendices, notes, bibliography, index; dust wrapper; Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, 1987. First edition. $50.00 125. Hardwick (Michael) THE OSPREY GUIDE TO ANTHONY TROLLOPE. Pp. 220(last blank); price-clipped dust wrapper, edges lightly rubbed and split; top edges of leaves foxed, inked inscription on upper free endpaper; Osprey, 1974. First edition. *Includes an alphabetical list of all the significant characters in the novels. $25.00 126. Harvey (Geoffrey) THE ART OF ANTHONY TROLLOPE. Pp. x+178(last blank), notes, select bibliography, index; dust wrapper, a trifle rubbed, price inked over on upper flap; Weidenfeld & Nicolson, 1980. First U.K. edition. $30.00 127. Heil (Elissa) THE CONFLICTING DISCOURSES OF THE DRAWING-ROOM. Anthony Trollope and Edmond and Jules de Goncourt. Pp. x+204+[2](advertisement, verso blank), notes, bibliography, index; floral patterned glazed papered boards; Peter Lang, New York, 1997. First U.S. edition. Studies in Nineteenth-Century British Literature series, Volume 7. *'Focusing on the social discourses in Anthony Trollope's Barchester Towers and Edmond and Jules de Goncourt's Renee Mauperin, particularly the dialogic exchanges of the drawing-room, this study offers significant insights into the usefulness of Bakhtinian theory. It reveals how the various levels of discourse operate in the texts, and consequently, how they relate to their social contexts determined by well-defined gender demarcations within the bourgeois ideological paradigm' [wrapper blurb]. $35.00 128. Heineman (Helen) FRANCES TROLLOPE. Pp. xii+164(last blank), frontispiece portrait, chronology, notes & references, selected bibliography, index; red cloth, spine lettered in gilt; bookseller's sticker at foot of upper pastedown; Twayne Publishers, Boston, 1984. First edition. Twayne's English Authors series. $40.00 129. Heineman (Helen) MRS. TROLLOPE: THE TRIUMPHANT FEMININE IN THE NINETEENTH CENTURY. Pp. [xii]+316, frontispiece portrait, plus 16 plates, notes, bibliography, index; dust wrapper, edges lightly rubbed, the back panel a trifle soiled; Ohio University Press, Athens, Ohio, 1982. Second printing. *Inscribed and signed by the author on upper free endpaper. Originally published in 1979. $40.00 130. Heineman (Helen K.) THREE VICTORIANS IN THE NEW WORLD. Interpretations of the New World in the works of Frances Trollope, Charles Dickens, and Anthony Trollope. Pp. xiv+298(last blank), bibliography; printed glazed papered boards; Peter Lang, New York, 1992. First edition. American University Studies, Series IV, English Language and Literature, Volume 106. *A critical examination of the works of three English novelists who visited the United States during the nineteenth century, comparing their immediate relations to the scenes and facts of American society with their published travel books, and then with the fictional forms all three subsequently employed in utilizing American scenes or characters. $50.00 131. Helling (Rafael) A CENTURY OF TROLLOPE CRITICISM. Pp. [ii]+204(last blank), bibliography, notes, index; upper board slightly soiled; faint graze to upper free endpaper; Kennikat Press, Port Washington, N.Y., 1967. *Originally published in 1956. Traces the main features of Trollope's reputation, chiefly in England, from the time his popularity was first established, to the mid 1950s. $50.00 132. Hennedy (Hugh L.) UNITY IN BARSETSHIRE. Pp. 144, bibliography, index; med. 8vo; printed paper wrappers, lightly soiled and worn; series title page offset, edges of leaves a trifle foxed; Mouton, The Hague, 1971. De Proprietatibus Litterarum, Series Practica, 28. *'Explores and demonstrates the coherence of six of the most popular novels of one of the most popular mid-Victorian novelists' [wrapper blurb]. $30.00 133. Hennessy (James Pope) ANTHONY TROLLOPE. Pp. 400, coloured frontispiece, 16 black & white plates, full page text illustrations, patterned endpapers, bibliography of the works of Trollope, index; tan buckram, spine blocked in green and lettered in gilt; top edges green; price-clipped dust wrapper, backstrip a trifle faded, small mark from removal of price sticker at foot of upper flap; Cape, 1971. First edition. *Written by the grandson of Sir John Pope Hennessy, an Irish member of Parliament widely believed by his contemporaries to have been the original for the Trollope character Phineas Finn. $50.00 134. Herbert (Christopher) TROLLOPE AND COMIC PLEASURE. Pp. xii+246(last blank), frontispiece, notes, list of works cited, index; dust wrapper, a couple of tiny splits to head of backstrip; University of Chicago Press, Chicago, 1987. First edition. $30.00 135. Kendrick (Walter M.) THE NOVEL-MACHINE. The theory and fiction of Anthony Trollope. Pp. xvi+144(last colophon), index; med. 8vo; dust wrapper, backstrip slightly faded; bookseller's sticker at foot of upper pastedown; Johns Hopkins University Press, Baltimore, Maryland, 1980. First edition. $30.00 136. Kincaid (James R.) THE NOVELS OF ANTHONY TROLLOPE. Pp. xvi+302, bibliography, index; corners of boards lightly bruised; dust wrapper, edges worn and split; small damp stain to upper pastedown near hinge, tiny split to fore-edge of lower free endpaper, edges of a few leaves slightly creased; Clarendon Press, Oxford, 1977. First U.K. edition. $40.00 137. Knox (Ronald A.) BARCHESTER PILGRIMAGE. Pp. xii+278, full page sketch map, 2 genealogical charts, index; boards a trifle soiled, the top fore-corners lightly bruised; top edges red; dust wrapper, soiled and lightly worn, the edges rubbed and split; two small rust marks to upper endpapers, the pages slightly browned, a little light foxing; Sheed & Ward, 1937. Second edition, reprinted. The Ark Library series. $40.00 138. Koets (C. C.) FEMALE CHARACTERS IN THE WORKS OF ANTHONY TROLLOPE. Pp. [viii]+106, plus loosely inserted errata leaf, text in English and occasional Dutch; med. 8vo; printed paper wrappers, slightly soiled and worn, the backstrip split and chipped; pages a trifle browned; T. Van Tilburg, Gouda 1933. $45.00 139. Lansbury (Coral) ARCADY IN AUSTRALIA. The evocation of Australia in nineteenth-century English literature. Pp. [x]+202, notes, bibliography, index; boards lightly flecked; price-clipped dust wrapper, slightly soiled; Melbourne University Press, Melbourne, 1970. First edition. *Includes Trollope reference. $30.00 140. Lansbury (Coral) THE REASONABLE MAN. Trollope's legal fiction. Pp. xii+228(last colophon), index; qr. black cloth, spine lettered in gilt, light brown cloth boards; dust wrapper, the backstrip faded, with tiny nick at foot; bookseller's sticker at foot of upper pastedown; Princeton University Press, Princeton, New Jersey, 1981. First edition. *Argues that Trollope's work in the Post Office influenced his fiction more than any literary figure or tradition. 'All Trollope's novels, the author writes, are transactions involving money and marriage, and all can be comprehended within the structure of the report designed by Fr a nc i sFe e l i ngf ort hePos tOf f i c e …Tr ol l opede s c r i be dar a t i o na lwor l dt ha ti se x pr e s s e d within a legal form and that may be analyzed as legal rhetoric' [wrapper blurb]. $45.00 141. Levine (George) DARWIN AND THE NOVELISTS. Patterns of science in Victorian Fiction. Pp. xiv+320(last blank), notes, index; med. 8vo; dust wrapper, tiny damp spot to bottom edge of upper flap; Harvard University Press, Cambridge, Mass., 1988. Second impression. *'A central chapter treats the almost aggressively unscientific Trollope as the most Darwinian of the novelists, who worked out a gradualist realism that is representative of the mainstream of Victorian fiction and strikingly consonant with key Darwinian ideas' [wrapper blurb]. $40.00 142. Lewin (Shirley Robin) THE GENTLEMAN IN TROLLOPE: INDIVIDUALITY AND MORAL CONDUCT. Pp. xii+304(last blank), notes & references, indices; dust wrapper, backstrip faded; Harvard University Press, Cambridge, Mass., 1982. First edition. $45.00 143. Lyons (Anne K.) ANTHONY TROLLOPE: An Annotated Bibliography of Periodical Works by and about him in the United States and Great Britain to 1900. Pp. [viii]+164(last blank), appendices, bibliography, index; gilt lettered pale green cloth, spine blocked in red; The Penkevill Publishing Company, Greenwood, Florida, 1985. $50.00 144. MacDonald (Susan Peck) ANTHONY TROLLOPE. Pp. xii+138, notes & references, selected bibliography, index; dust wrapper, edges a trifle rubbed; Twayne Publishers, Boston, 1987. First edition. Twayne's English Authors series. $40.00 145. McMaster (Juliet) TROLLOPE'S PALLISER NOVELS. Theme and pattern. Pp. [x]+242, 15 full page illustrations, appendix, notes, index; top edges brown; dust wrapper, the laminate slightly chipped at head of backstrip; upper hinge tender; Macmillan, 1978. $40.00 146. McMaster (R. D.) TROLLOPE AND THE LAW. Pp. xii+180(last blank), notes & references, index; spine cloth faded; dust wrapper, lightly faded; top edges of leaves a trifle foxed; Macmillan, 1986. First edition. Macmillan Studies in Victorian Literature. $35.00 147. Markwick (Margaret) TROLLOPE AND WOMEN. Pp. xii+218, frontispiece plus 17 full page illustrations, bibliography, index; dust wrapper; The Trollope Society, 1997. First edition. *'While in his plots and in his authorial asides Trollope usually supports conventional Victorian attitudes, in his handling of women he shows himself capable of a real understanding of their restrictions and problems' [wrapper blurb]. $35.00 148. Milford, Sir Humphrey: ESSAYS, mainly on the nineteenth century, presented to Sir Humphrey Milford. Pp. viii+160, frontispiece portrait; price-clipped dust wrapper, slightly soiled, edges lightly chipped and split; Oxford University Press, 1948. First edition. *Contributors include Michael Sadleir (on Victorian publishing), Bernard Darwin (19th century sporting writers), and R. Vaughan Williams (on music). The chapter on Trollope, Personal names in Trollope's political novels, is by R. W. Chapman. $25.00 149. Moody (Ellen) TROLLOPE ON THE NET. Pp. xxii+274, text illustrations (mostly full page), notes, index; med. 8vo; dust wrapper; The Trollope Society, 1999. First edition. *An account, by its leader, of a group discussion of Trollope's works on Trollope-l, the worldwide Internet discussion group devoted to his study. $50.00 150. Morse (Deborah Denenholz) WOMEN IN TROLLOPE'S PALLISER NOVELS. Pp. 166(last blank), full page illustrations, notes, bibliography, index; dust wrapper; UMI Reseach Press, Ann Arbor, Michigan, 1987. First edition. $50.00 151. Moss (Sidney P.) & Carolyn J. Moss. DICKENS, TROLLOPE, JEFFERSON: THREE ANGLO-AMERICAN ENCOUNTERS. Pp. [xii]+84, text illustrations, notes; dust wrapper; Whitston Publishing Company, New York, 2000. First edition. *Includes Anthony Trollope and Kate Field The Story of a Friendship. $30.00 152. Muir (Marcie) ANTHONY TROLLOPE IN AUSTRALIA. Pp. [vi]+106(last colophon), the title page printed in red & black; narrow faded strip at head and foot of spine; dust wrapper, slightly soiled and worn, edges lightly chipped and split; pages slightly browned; The Wakefield Press, Adelaide, 1949. First edition. $45.00 153. Mullen (Richard) ANTHONY TROLLOPE: A VICTORIAN IN HIS WORLD. Pp. xvi+768(last blank), frontispiece, 16 plates, text illustrations, notes, indices; thick med. 8vo; dust wrapper, the backstrip faded and slightly creased; bookseller's sticker at foot of upper pastedown; Duckworth, 1990. First edition. $40.00 154. Mullen (Richard) BIRDS OF PASSAGE. Five Englishwomen in search of America. Pp. x+246, half-title page vignette, tailpiece illustrations, chronology, notes, index; dust wrapper; small hole (partly affecting text) to pp. 75/6; Duckworth, 1994. First edition. *Includes a chapters on Frances Trollope. $35.00 155. Nardin (Jane) HE KNEW SHE WAS RIGHT: THE INDEPENDENT WOMAN IN THE NOVELS OF ANTHONY TROLLOPE. Pp. xviii+238(last blank), title page vignette, notes, index; dust wrapper; Southern Illinois University Press, 1989. First edition. $45.00 156. Nardin (Jane) TROLLOPE & VICTORIAN MORAL PHILOSOPHY. Pp. x+174(last blank), notes, index; Ohio State University Press, Athens, Ohio, 1996. First edition. $40.00 157. Neville-Sington (Pamela) FANNY TROLLOPE. The life and adventures of a clever woman. Pp. xiv+416, plates, notes, bibliography, index; med. 8vo; dust wrapper; Viking Press, 1997. First U.K. edition. *A biography of Fanny Trollope which also focuses on her relationship with her son Anthony. $40.00 158. Newton (A. Edward) THE AMENITIES OF BOOK-COLLECTING and kindred affections. Pp. [iv]+xxii+374(last colophon), coloured frontispiece with tissue guard, plus 39 black & white plates, text illustrations and facsimiles, index; qr. light brown buckram, slightly foxed, with printed paper title label on spine, brown papered boards, corners a trifle bruised; t.e.g.; bookplate and bookseller's stamp on upper pastedown, inscription on upper free endpaper, scattered light foxing; The Atlantic Monthly Press, Boston, 1920. Third impression. *Includes a chapter on Anthony Trollope (A Great Victorian). $75.00 159. Newton (A. Edward) THE TROLLOPE SOCIETY. The purpose of this little pamphlet is to secure members who will sponsor the publication of a much-needed, complete, legible, inexpensive and uniform edition of the novels and tales of one of the greatest of the Vi c t or i a ns… Ant h onyTr ol l ope .Pp.[ 3 8 ], frontispiece portrait; f'cap. 8vo; blue/grey printed paper wrappers, stabbed & tied, the backstrip a trifle faded; the Author, Philadelphia, 1934. First edition. *Issued both as a Christmas keepsake, and as a fundraiser: 'it will be sent to any person, upon receipt of fifty cents in postage stamps, who might like to join with me in honoring Anthony Trollope, and I particularly ask my friends to send me the names and addresses of their friends with a view to securing members for the Society and contributors to the fund which I have set out to raise' [author's foreword]. Includes a Check List of the Writings of Anthony Trollope. $45.00 160. Nichols (Spencer Van Bokkelen) THE SIGNIFICANCE OF ANTHONY TROLLOPE. Pp. 60(last blank), folding coloured frontispiece, 2 black & white plates, the title and headings within decorative borders printed in green, chronology; small cr. 4to; cloth backed dark grey papered boards, spine lettered in gilt, the boards lightly rubbed, corners a trifle worn; fore and bottom edges uncut; a little light foxing; Douglas C. McMurtrie, New York, 1925. Edition limited to 490 numbered copies on Italian handmade paper. *Presentation copy, inscribed and signed by the author (dated 1929) on upper free endpaper. The frontispiece is a pictorial map of Barsetshire. $120.00 161. Olmsted (John Charles) & Jeffrey Egan Welch. THE REPUTATION OF TROLLOPE: AN ANNOTATED BIBLIOGRAPHY 1925-1975. Pp. xxiv+212, bibliography, indices; gilt lettered dark green cloth, bottom corners a trifle rubbed; Garland Publishing, New York, 1978. Garland Reference Library of the Humanities, Volume 88. *Lists and annotates writings on Trollope published in Great Britain and North America from 1925 to 1975. Also lists the most important books and articles published in Australia, France, Germany, and Italy during the same period. $45.00 162. Overton (Bill) THE UNOFFICIAL TROLLOPE. Pp. xii+212, notes, index; dust wrapper, corners a trifle rubbed, the back panel faintly soiled; top edges of leaves slightly marked; The Harvester Press, 1982. First U.K. edition. $50.00 163. Polhemus (Robert M.) THE CHANGING WORLD OF ANTHONY TROLLOPE. Pp. xiv+252, chronology of Trollope's novels, index; corners of boards a trifle rubbed; priceclipped dust wrapper, lightly worn, spine quite faded, edges lightly rubbed and split; free endpapers faintly soiled, small split/crease to top edge of last few leaves; University of California Press, Berkeley, 1968. First U.S. edition. *'This first chronological study of Trollope's whole career as a novelist shows how the forms and facts of historical, social, and psychological change obsessed him and how he imaged and chronicled it from year to year' [wrapper blurb]. $35.00 164. Polhemus (Robert M.) EROTIC FAITH. Being in love from Jane Austen to D. H. Lawrence. Pp. xii+364(last blank), 20 plates (8 coloured), notes, bibliography, index; med. 8vo; dust wrapper; University of Chicago Press, Chicago, 1990. First edition. *The chapter on Trollope, The Mirror of Desire, focuses on Phineas Finn and Phineas Redux. $45.00 165. Pollard (Arthur) ANTHONY TROLLOPE. Pp. xii+208, bibliography, index; dust wrapper; edges of leaves a trifle foxed; Routledge & Kegan Paul, 1978. First edition. $40.00 1944. Second printing. *Collection of essays, including three on Trollope. Also chapters on Jane Austen, Rhoda Broughton, and Mary Elizabeth Braddon. $30.00 173. St George (Andrew) THE DESCENT OF MANNERS. Etiquette, rules & the Victorians. Pp. xxii+330, notes, index; med. 8vo; dust wrapper; Chatto & Windus, 1993. First edition. *Includes a section on American Visitors: Trollope's Folly. $40.00 174. Sanders (Andrew) ANTHONY TROLLOPE. Pp. xii+80(last blank)+[4](advertisements), frontispiece, notes, select bibliography, index; pictorial stiff paper wrappers, bottom fore-corner of lower wrapper creased; bottom fore-corner of several leaves faintly creased; Northcote House, 1998. Writers and their Work series. $20.00 166. Pollard (Arthur) TROLLOPE'S POLITICAL NOVELS. Pp. 26(last blank), frontispiece; printed paper wrappers, stapled, a trifle marked, small price sticker on lower wrapper; The Publications Committee, University of Hull, Hull, Yorkshire, 1968. Inaugural Lectures series. *A lecture delived in the University of Hull on 30 April 1968. $25.00 175. Simmons (James C.) STAR-SPANGLED EDEN. 19th century America through the eyes of Dickens, Wilde, Frances Trollope, Frank Harris, and other British Travelers. Pp. xiv+350, full page illustrations, notes, bibliography, index; qr. black cloth, spine lettered in gilt, cream papered boards; dust wrapper; Carroll & Graf, New York, 2000. First edition. $35.00 167. Pope-Hennessy (Una) THREE ENGLISH WOMEN IN AMERICA. Pp. 304, 5 portrait plates; black buckram, spine lettered and decorated in gilt, lightly worn, corners bruised; inked inscription (dated 1930) on upper free endpaper, the endpapers faintly offset, a little light foxing; Ernest Benn, 1929. First edition. *Fanny Trollope, Fanny Kemble, and Harriet Martineau. $40.00 176. Skilton (David) ANTHONY TROLLOPE AND HIS CONTEMPORARIES. A study in the theory and conventions of mid-Victorian fiction. Pp. xiv+170, frontispiece, appendices, index; price-clipped dust wrapper, lightly worn, the laminate lifting slightly, edges rubbed and lightly split; bookseller's ink stamp at foot of upper free endpaper, the free endpapers faintly offset, a couple of tiny damp spots; Longman, 1972. First edition. $35.00 168. Quiller-Couch (Sir Arthur) CHARLES DICKENS AND OTHER VICTORIANS. Pp. viii+240, index; gilt-lettered navy cloth, slightly flecked and rubbed; all edges uncut, a few leaves carelessly opened; dust wrapper, lightly soiled and worn, the edges chipped and split; free endpapers offset, a little light foxing; Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, 1925. First edition. *Includes studies of Dickens, Thackeray, Disraeli, Mrs. Gaskell, and Trollope. The chapter on Trollope's Barsetshire novels is the only one which was not originally delivered as a lecture at Cambridge. $60.00 177. Skilton (David) ANTHONY TROLLOPE AND HIS CONTEMPORARIES. A study in the theory and conventions of mid-Victorian fiction. Pp. xxii+170, appendices (including bibliography), index; dust wrapper; Macmillan Press, Houndmills, Basingstoke, Hampshire, 1996. Reissued with alterations. $45.00 169. Ransom (Teresa) FANNY TROLLOPE: A REMARKABLE LIFE. Foreword by Victoria Glendinning. Pp. xviii+236, 16 plates, index; dust wrapper; Allan Sutton/St. Martin's Press, 1995. First U.K. edition. $40.00 170. Reed (A. H.) Editor. WITH ANTHONY TROLLOPE IN NEW ZEALAND. Edited by A. H. Reed. Illustrations by Sid Scales. Pp. 156, text illustrations, 2 full page maps, index; corners of boards bruised; dust wrapper, lightly worn, edges rubbed and split; a little light foxing; Reed, Wellington, 1969. First edition thus, limited to 1550 numbered copies signed by the editor. *Extracts from Trollope's account of his travels through New Zealand in 1872. $45.00 171. Sadleir (Michael) TROLLOPE. A bibliography. An analysis of the history and structure of the works of Anthony Trollope, and a general survey of the effect of original publishing conditions on a book's subsequent rarity. Pp. xvi+322+[2]+10(Addenda & corrigenda), frontispiece portrait plus 7 plates, full page facsimiles, double page chart, index; lower board faintly marked; dust wrapper, slightly soiled, the backstrip lightly faded, edges a trifle rubbed and split; pages lightly browned; Dawson, 1977. Second impression thus. *Still the standard Trollope bibliography; first published by Constable in 1928. $95.00 172. Sadleir (Michael) THINGS PAST. Pp. [vi]+270(last colophon), coloured frontispiece, index; boards slightly canted, corners bruised; top edges red; price-clipped dust wrapper, edges lightly rubbed and split, with short closed tear from top edge into front panel; Constable, 178. Smalley (Donald) Editor. ANTHONY TROLLOPE: THE CRITICAL HERITAGE. Pp. xviii+572, bibliography, index; maroon cloth, lettered and decorated in gilt; Routledge, 1995. Reprinted. The Critical Heritage series. *Originally published in 1969. $50.00 179. Snow (C. P.) TROLLOPE. Pp. 192, 24 coloured plates, black & white frontispiece portrait and numerous text illustrations (some full page), patterned endpapers, notes, index; cr. 4to; price-clipped dust wrapper, faintly faded and rubbed; top edges of leaves a trifle foxed; Macmillan, 1975. First edition. $40.00 180. Speare (Morris Edmund) THE POLITICAL NOVEL. Its development in England and in America. Pp. x+378(last blank), frontispiece portrait, notes, appendix, index; navy cloth, spine lettered in gilt; fore-edges uncut; endpapers lightly offset, top edges of leaves a trifle foxed; Russell & Russell, New York, 1966. Reprinted. *Chapters on Disraeli, Trollope (The Victorian Realist in the Political Novel), George Eliot, and others. Originally published in 1924. $40.00 181. Srebrnik (Patricia Thomas) ALEXANDER STRAHAN, VICTORIAN PUBLISHER. Pp. x+270(last blank), 6 plates, notes, bibliography, index; dust wrapper, slightly soiled; University of Michigan Press, Ann Arbor, Michigan, 1986. First edition. *Alexander Strahan was an important figure in British publishing during the nineteenth century. At the peak of his career, he published essays by Gladstone and fiction by Trollope; and in 1869 he became the exclusive publisher to the poet laureate, Tennyson. Strahan also founded some of the important periodicals of the time - including Good Words, which in 1863 withdrew from an agreement to publish Trollope's novel Rachel Ray on the grounds that it was unfit for Evangelical readers. Trollope wrote to J. E. Millais, the artist, that Good Words 'has thrown me over. They write me word that I am too wicked.... They have tried to serve God and the devil together, and finding that goodness pays best, have thrown over me and the devil.' $45.00 182. Stebbins (Lucy Poate) & Richard Poate Stebbins. THE TROLLOPES. The chronicle of a writing family. Pp. xii+394, frontispiece portait plus 3 plates, folding family tree, notes, index; grey cloth, lettered in blue, fore-corners lightly bruised, slight bump to top edge of lower board near spine; top edges grey; upper hinge cracked; Columbia University Press, New York, 1945. Second printing. $25.00 183. Super (R. H.) THE CHRONICLER OF BARSETSHIRE. A life of Anthony Trollope. Pp. xvi+528, 8 plates, notes, index; dust wrapper; University of Michigan Press, Ann Arbor, Michigan, 1988. First edition. $50.00 184. Super (R. H.) TROLLOPE IN THE POST OFFICE. Pp. 136(last blank), appendices, notes, index; dust wrapper, backstrip faintly faded, the back panel a trifle soiled; bookseller's sticker at foot of upper pastedown; University of Michigan Press, Ann Arbor, Michigan, 1981. First edition. *Focuses on Trollope's civil service career. 'For thirty-four years, from age nineteen to age fifty-two, he served the Post Office in assignments that gave him a detailed familiarity with Ireland, England, and Wales, and a personal acquaintance with the postal patrons. As a roving ambassador for the Post Office, he went to the West Indies, the Near East, and the United States' [wrapper blurb]. $35.00 185. Sutherland (J. A.) VICTORIAN NOVELISTS AND PUBLISHERS. Pp. [viii]+252(last blank), notes, index; tiny split to cloth at foot of lower joint; dust wrapper, edges lightly rubbed and split; University of Chicago Press, Chicago, 1976. First U.S. edition. *Chapters on Trollope, Dickens, and others. $40.00 186. Swigle (L. J.) ROMANTICISM AND ANTHONY TROLLOPE. A study in the continuities of nineteenth-century literary thought. Pp. [x]+300(last blank), notes, index; top fore-corner of upper board faintly bruised; dust wrapper; bookseller's sticker at foot of upper pastedown; University of Michigan Press, Ann Arbor, Michigan, 1990. First edition. $45.00 187. Taylor (Robert H.) CERTAIN SMALL WORKS. With an Introduction by Jeremiah S. Finch. Pp. xii+164, full page illustrations, index; spine cloth slightly faded; dust wrapper, lightly soiled; a little light foxing; Princeton University Press, Princeton, New Jersey, 1980. First edition. *Part III is devoted to Anthony Trollope. $40.00 188. Terry (R. C.) ANTHONY TROLLOPE: The Artist in Hiding. Pp. xiv+286, 8 plates, appendices, notes, index; bottom edge of boards a trifle flecked; top edges green; dust wrapper; Macmillan, 1977. First edition. $45.00 189. Terry (R. C.) A TROLLOPE CHRONOLOGY. Pp. xxxiv+168(last blank), frontispiece, appendices, indices; dust wrapper; Macmillan, 1989. First edition. Macmillan Author Chronologies Series. *'As Post Office surveyor, writer, editor and world traveller, Trollope maintained a hectic schedule. Thus a chronology combining factual details with comment and anecdote from his wide contacts provides an invaluable aid in checking what Trollope was doing and where he was at any given time' [wrapper blurb]. $30.00 190. Terry (R. C.) Editor. OXFORD READER'S COMPANION TO TROLLOPE. Pp. xxiv+626(last blank), frontispiece portrait, text illustrations, maps, chronology, family trees; med. 8vo; dust wrapper; Oxford University Press, Oxford, 1999. $60.00 191. Terry (R. C.) Editor. TROLLOPE: INTERVIEWS AND RECOLLECTIONS. Pp. xxxiv+258(last blank), 8 plates, chronology, suggestions for further reading, index; dust wrapper, top edge of lower flap slightly soiled; Macmillan Press, Houndmills, Basingstoke, Hampshire, 1987. First edition. Interviews and Recollections series. *Recollections of Trollope by Muriel Trollope, Thomas Adolphus Trollope, Henry James, Thackeray, and others. $45.00 192. Thorp (Willard) & Henry S. Drinker. TWO ADDRESSES DELIVERED TO MEMBERS OF THE GROLIER CLUB. I: Trollope's America, by Willard Thorp, on October 18, 1949; II: The Lawyers of Anthony Trollope, by Henry S. Drinker, on November 15, 1949. Pp. 48(last colophon); cloth backed grey papered boards, with printed paper title label on upper board, the boards slightly soiled, corners a trifle rubbed; bookplate of Alfred M. Hellman (whose collection of D. H Lawrence first editions is now housed at Columbia University) on the upper pastedown, pages slightly browned; The Grolier Club, New York, 1950. Edition limited to 750 copies. $50.00 193. Tingay (Lance O.) ANTHONY TROLLOPE POLITICIAN. His parliamentary candidature at Beverley, 1868. Pp. vi+30+[2](blank, advertisement); printed paper wrappers, stapled, the backstrip faded; The Silverbridge Press, 1988. First edition. *In the General Election of November 1868, Trollope stood as a Liberal candidate for the Borough of Beverley, capital of the East Riding of Yorkshire. He ended bottom of the poll, and made no further attempt to enter Parliament. This booklet includes the four main speeches he made during the election campaign. $35.00 194. Tingay (Lance O.) HOMAGE TO BARSETSHIRE. A radio script. Pp. 32+[2](blank, advertisement), frontispiece map of Barsetshire; printed paper wrappers, stapled; The Silverbridge Press, 1989. First edition. *Radio script featuring Trollope as a character, along with Doctor Thorne, from the novel of that name. $40.00 195. Tingay (Lance O.) THE TROLLOPE STUDENT. An annotated list of full length studies (1833-1900) and A check list of the writings of Anthony Trollope and other members of the Trollope family (1743-1909). Pp. x+38, processed; printed stiff paper wrappers, stapled, the backstrip a trifle faded; The Silverbridge Press, 1989. $50.00 196. Tomalin (Claire) THE INVISIBLE WOMAN. The story of Nelly Ternan and Charles Dickens. Pp. xvi+318(last blank), 24 plates, notes, bibliography, index; med. 8vo; dust wrapper; Viking Press, 1990. Second impression. *Biography of the actress who, for the last thirteen years of Charles Dickens's life, was his secret companion. Nelly Ternan's sister, Frances Eleanor, was the second wife of Thomas Adolphus Trollope, and wrote an early biography of her mother-in-law, Mrs. [Frances] Trollope. [See next item]. $35.00 197. Trollope (Frances Eleanor) FRANCES TROLLOPE, HER LIFE AND LITERARY WORK from George III to Victoria. By her daughter-in-law. In two volumes. Pp. viii+326(last blank)+frontispiece portrait with tissue guard both volumes, patterned endpapers, index; gilt lettered navy cloth, a trifle flecked and rubbed, small snag to spine cloth Volume II, signs of removal of small label from both spines; uncut; hinges tender at a couple of points, the outer leaves lightly offset, occasional slight soiling; Richard Bentley, 1895. First edition. *From the library of the Parliament of Victoria, with their ink stamps on outer leaves. Frances Eleanor Trollope was the second wife of Anthony Trollope's brother Thomas Adolphus. $95.00 198. The Trollope Society. TROLLOPIANA: THE JOURNAL OF THE TROLLOPE SOCIETY. A bound run of 35 issues, from Number 1 [1988] to Number 35, November 1996. Two volumes; ranging from 16 to 32 pages (most 24) including wrappers, illustrated; binder's brown cloth, the original coloured floral patterned wrappers bound in; accompanied by a further run of 34 loose issues of the Journal, in the original wrappers, comprising Numbers 36 (February 1997) through to Number 68 (February, 2005); [together with] THE TROLLOPE SOCIETY PROSPECTUS. 7 issues, for the years 1994-2000, most 24 pages including pictorial wrappers, illustrated; and 3 issues (Numbers 8, 10, and 11) of VICTORIANA, an 8pp. Christmas keepsake compiled by John Letts for Society members; 1988-2005. $150.00 199. Turner (Mark W.) TROLLOPE AND THE MAGAZINES. Gendered issues in midVictorian Britain. Pp. xii+272(last blank), 9 full page illustrations, appendices, bibliography, index; dust wrapper; Macmillan Press, Houndmills, Basingstoke, Hampshire, 2000. First U.K. edition. $40.00 200. Van Ingen (Mary-Jo) CONFLICT AND CLASSIFICATION. The communicational approach of the Palo Alto School applied to three novels of Anthony Trollope. Pp. [ii]+328(last blank), text figures and diagrams, appendices, bibliography; printed glazed paper wrappers, the lower wrapper slightly soiled; Peter Lang, Frankfurt, 1991. European University Studies, Series XIV, Volume 225. *'The dialogues of the mid-Victorian novelist, Anthony Trollope, are particularly permeable to modern psycholinguistic terminology as used by the Palo Alto School, especially by Paul Watzlawick in Pragmatics of Human Communication. We have classified Trollope novels into pleasant and unpleasant, using Barchester Towers and He Knew he was Right as respective examples of normogenic personal and social conflict, and schizophrenia-i n duc e dhu br i s … Thequ e s t i oni sp os e dwhe t he ra semiotic notation can show differentiation between psychotic and normogenic behaviour, with reflections on how to define each.' [wrapper blurb]. $30.00 201. Wall (Stephen) TROLLOPE AND CHARACTER. Pp. [viii]+398(last blank), bibliographical notes, index; dust wrapper, backstrip and part of front panel faded; pages slightly browned; Faber, 1988. First edition. $40.00 202. Walpole (Hugh) ANTHONY TROLLOPE. Pp. viii+206(last blank)+[2](advertisements), index; maroon cloth, spine lettered in gilt, the boards lightly flecked and rubbed; top edges maroon, others uncut; a little light foxing and occasional slight offsetting; Macmillan, 1928. English Men of Letters series. $30.00 203. Walton (Priscilla L.) PATRIARCHAL DESIRE AND VICTORIAN DISCOURSE: A LACANIAN READING OF ANTHONY TROLLOPE'S PALLISER NOVELS. Pp. [viii]+180, index; red cloth, lettered and decorated in black; dust wrapper, backstrip slightly faded; University of Toronto Press, Toronto, 1995. First edition. *Links feminist analysis with psychoanalytic theory, and brings both to bear on an examination of Trollope's political novels. $40.00 204. Waugh (Arthur) A HUNDRED YEARS OF PUBLISHING. Being the story of Chapman & Hall, Ltd. Pp. xviii+326, frontispiece with lettered tissue guard, plus 48 plates (1 folding, 3 on green paper — being facsimiles of original wrappers for Pickwick, Nicholas Nickleby, and A Tale of Two Cities), plus 4 page facsimile (printed on green paper) of a programme for a Chapman & Hall Cricket Club supper & concert, index; black buckram, spine lettered in gilt, lightly rubbed, corners bruised; fore and bottom edges uncut; small initial stamp near top edge and bookseller's sticker at foot of upper pastedown, a little light foxing and offsetting; Chapman & Hall, 1930. First edition. *Centenary history of the publishers of Dickens and Trollope, with much information on both authors. Arthur Waugh (the Father of Evelyn) was Managing Director of Chapman & Hall from 1902 to 1930. $45.00 205. WESTMI NSTER ABBEY … DEDI CATI ON OFA MEMORIAL TO ANTHONY TROLLOPE. [Cover title]. Pp. 12(including wrappers); printed stiff paper wrappers, stapled, small vignette of Trollope on upper wrapper; top fore-corners lightly creased; 1993. *The Order of Service for the Dedication of the memorial to Trollope in Poet's Corner, Westminster Abbey, March 25, 1993. $25.00 206. Wildman (John Hazard) ANTHONY TROLLOPE'S ENGLAND. Pp. [x]+136(last blank), bibliography, index; edges of boards a trifle bruised; price-clipped dust wrapper, slightly soiled and rubbed; a little faint foxing; Brown University, Providence, Rhode Island, 1940. Brown University Studies Volume V. *A study of Victorian England as presented in the Barchester novels. $50.00 207. Windolph (F. Lyman) REFLECTIONS OF THE LAW IN LITERATURE. Pp. 84(last blank); blue/grey cloth, the spine blocked in red and lettered in gilt; some light foxing and occasional slight soiling; Books For Libraries Press, Freeport, New York, 1970. Essay Index Reprint Series. *Three lectures originally delivered at Franklin and Marshall College (University of Pennsylvania), in March 1955: Trollope and the Law; Shakespeare and the Law; and Browning and the Law. $25.00 208. Wright (Andrew) ANTHONY TROLLOPE: DREAM AND ART. Pp. x+174(last blank), notes & references, select bibliography, guides to the study of Trollope, index; dust wrapper, backstrip faintly faded, the back panel a trifle soiled; University of Chicago Press, Chicago, 1983. First edition. $40.00 209. Yeazell (Ruth Bernard) Editor. SEX, POLITICS, AND SCIENCE IN THE NINETEENTH-CENTURY NOVEL. Pp. xiv+196(last blank), index; gilt lettered black cloth, a trifle rubbed; Johns Hopkins University Press, Baltimore, 1986. First edition. *Chapters on Trollope, George Eliot, and others. $30.00 References cited Ferguson. BIBLIOGRAPHY OF AUSTRALIA. John Alexander Ferguson. Facsimile edition, in 7 volumes. National Library of Australia, Canberra, 1975-77. Padwick. A Bibliography of Cricket. E. W. Padwick. The Library Association, London, 1984. Second edition, revised and enlarged to the end of 1979. Sadleir. XIX Century Fiction. Michael Sadleir. Two volumes; Maurizo Martino, Cambridge, Mass., n.d.[c.1995]. Reprinted Sadleir. Trollope: A Bibliography. Michael Sadleir. Dawson, London, 1964. Reprinted. Wolff. Nineteenth-Century Fiction. A Bibliographical Catalogue based on the collection formed by Robert Lee Wolff. Five volumes in two; Maurizo Martino, Cambridge, Mass., n.d. Reprinted.
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