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Auction archive: Lot number 44

DICKENS, Charles (1812-1870) Two autograph letters signed to...

Estimate
£4,000 - £6,000
ca. US$6,192 - US$9,288
Price realised:
£47,475
ca. US$73,498
Auction archive: Lot number 44

DICKENS, Charles (1812-1870) Two autograph letters signed to...

Estimate
£4,000 - £6,000
ca. US$6,192 - US$9,288
Price realised:
£47,475
ca. US$73,498
Beschreibung:

DICKENS, Charles (1812-1870). Two autograph letters signed to the poet and journalist William Cullen Bryant, Carlton House, New York, 14 and 27 February 1842, together 3 pages, 8vo , the second with later annotation to upper margin. Provenance : by descent from the recipient.
DICKENS, Charles (1812-1870). Two autograph letters signed to the poet and journalist William Cullen Bryant, Carlton House, New York, 14 and 27 February 1842, together 3 pages, 8vo , the second with later annotation to upper margin. Provenance : by descent from the recipient. Warm letters of admiration and friendship for a fellow author. Dickens's and Bryant's careers mirrored each other remarkably. Both men were writers (Bryant a poet, not a novelist), journalists, editors, public speakers, and social and political activists. Their friendship was confirmed during Dickens's first US tour in 1842 as demonstrated in these letters and books. Dickens writes: 'With one exception (and that's Irving) you are the man I most wanted to see in America'. Dickens excuses himself for not having been able to see Bryant when he called, adding though that 'As I lost what I most eagerly longed for, I ask you for your sympathy and not for your forgiveness'. He presses Bryant to come and breakfast with him -- 'I don't call to leave a card at your door before asking you, because I love you too well to be ceremonious with you. I have a thumbed book at home, so well now that it has nothing of you on the back, but one gilt "B", and the remotest possible traces of a "y". My credentials are in my earnest admiration of its beautiful contents'. The second letter accompanied the gift of a group of Dickens's works: 'If I had any control over the accompanying books, they should be un illustrated, and in outward appearance more worthy your acceptance'. Two of the books mentioned in the letter are offered here: The Posthumous Papers of the Pickwick Club and The Old Curiosity Shop , both Philadelphia: Lea and Blanchard, 1842, original cloth (stained, worn), each inscribed to Bryant 'from his friend and admirer, Charles Dickens'. (4)

Auction archive: Lot number 44
Auction:
Datum:
12 Jun 2013
Auction house:
Christie's
12 June 2013, London, King Street
Beschreibung:

DICKENS, Charles (1812-1870). Two autograph letters signed to the poet and journalist William Cullen Bryant, Carlton House, New York, 14 and 27 February 1842, together 3 pages, 8vo , the second with later annotation to upper margin. Provenance : by descent from the recipient.
DICKENS, Charles (1812-1870). Two autograph letters signed to the poet and journalist William Cullen Bryant, Carlton House, New York, 14 and 27 February 1842, together 3 pages, 8vo , the second with later annotation to upper margin. Provenance : by descent from the recipient. Warm letters of admiration and friendship for a fellow author. Dickens's and Bryant's careers mirrored each other remarkably. Both men were writers (Bryant a poet, not a novelist), journalists, editors, public speakers, and social and political activists. Their friendship was confirmed during Dickens's first US tour in 1842 as demonstrated in these letters and books. Dickens writes: 'With one exception (and that's Irving) you are the man I most wanted to see in America'. Dickens excuses himself for not having been able to see Bryant when he called, adding though that 'As I lost what I most eagerly longed for, I ask you for your sympathy and not for your forgiveness'. He presses Bryant to come and breakfast with him -- 'I don't call to leave a card at your door before asking you, because I love you too well to be ceremonious with you. I have a thumbed book at home, so well now that it has nothing of you on the back, but one gilt "B", and the remotest possible traces of a "y". My credentials are in my earnest admiration of its beautiful contents'. The second letter accompanied the gift of a group of Dickens's works: 'If I had any control over the accompanying books, they should be un illustrated, and in outward appearance more worthy your acceptance'. Two of the books mentioned in the letter are offered here: The Posthumous Papers of the Pickwick Club and The Old Curiosity Shop , both Philadelphia: Lea and Blanchard, 1842, original cloth (stained, worn), each inscribed to Bryant 'from his friend and admirer, Charles Dickens'. (4)

Auction archive: Lot number 44
Auction:
Datum:
12 Jun 2013
Auction house:
Christie's
12 June 2013, London, King Street
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