“SHE’S NEVER FOUND PEACE SINCE SHE LEFT HIS ARMS”: FIRST EDITION OF JUDE THE OBSCURE, IN ORIGINAL CLOTH
HARDY, Thomas. Jude the Obscure. (London: Osgood, McIlvaine, 1896). Octavo, original gilt-stamped blue-green cloth, top edge gilt, uncut.
First edition, first issue, of Hardy’s last work of fiction, with map and lovely frontispiece etching by H. Macbeth-Raeburn, in original cloth.
Jude the Obscure “was begun as a serial story in Harper’s Magazine at the end of November 1894, and was continued in monthly parts. But, as in the case of Tess of the d’Urbervilles, the magazine version was for various reasons abridged and modified in some degree, the present edition being the first in which the whole appears as originally written” (Webb, 83). The novel was received with mixed reviews due to its disturbing content and implications that it was autobiographical. Burned by a bishop and banned for its “indecency,” Jude became Hardy’s last work of fiction (Smith-Seymour, 547). First issue, with Osgood’s name on verso of title and gilt-stamped on spine. Mostly first state, with seven of the first eight signatures containing page numbers on the partially blank pages (Purdy, 87). Purdy, 86-91. Sadleir 1108. Sterling 456. Wolff 2979. Owner signature of prominent American defense lawyer Victor Rabinowitz. Rabinowitz was a firm supporter of civil rights and free speech and represented clients ranging from “labor unions to Black Panthers to Cuba” as well as famous personalities such as “Julian Bond, Daniel Ellsberg, Paul Robeson, the Rev. Philip Berrigan, Rockwell Kent and Alger Hiss” (New York Times). Bookseller blindstamp.
A few tiny spots of soiling to interior, only slight rubbing to extremities. A handsome, near-fine copy.