“I HAVE OFTEN BEEN ASKED HOW IT WAS… THAT I BECAME AN OPIUM-EATER”
DE QUINCEY, Thomas. The Works. Edinburgh: Adam and Charles Black, circa 1880. Sixteen volumes. Octavo, contemporary full limp burgundy morocco, elaborately gilt-decorated spines, raised bands, all edges gilt. $2200.
Collected edition, with 15 frontispiece portraits, handsomely bound by Birdsall & Son.
De Quincey's "rich imagination enabled him… to become one of the great masters of English in what he calls the 'department of impassioned prose'… he has left many writings which… are unrivaled in modern English" (DNB). Includes Confessions of an English Opium-Eater, as well as biographies, reviews, and essays concerning literary figures from Milton to Coleridge. Volume XVI with illustrated title page instead of frontispiece, as issued.
A fine set.