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Wood, Charles Erskine Scott. A Masque Of Love. Chicago: Walter M. Hill, 1904.

Price: US$175.00 + shipping

Condition: Very Good

Description: 87 numbered pgs. Limited Edition of 500 cys. Printed at the Elston Press, New Rochelle, N. Y. Wood (1852-1944) American poet, wrote "The Poet In The Desert" "Heavenly Discourse" "Poems From The Ranges" "Sonnets To Sappho" among others. Wood was very humanitarian, even resigning from the U. S. Army because of injustices against the Indians. He became a lawyer but still retained his humanitarian sympathies against social injustices. The Masque (Mask) is a form of dramatic entertainment . . . . likely origins in primitive fertility rites, but sometimes considered to be more a pastoral drama, etc. Title page decoration: Cherub & arabesque, flowers & foliage. Previous owner's inscription & tribute on front flyleaf. Light green/gray covered boards with tan cloth spine. Spine with pastdown title. Some foxing to Title pg. & verso & following pages, else very little foxing throughout rest of volume & only very occasionally in margins. Overall cond. is very clean & very good.

Seller: Boxer Books, Newberg, OR, U.S.A.

Wood, Charles Erskine Scott. A Masque of Love. Walter M. Hill, Chicago, 1904.

Price: US$175.00 + shipping

Description: Octavo. 87 (1)pp. Full vellum with beveled edges with gilt lettering on spine. Title page with arabesque headpiece and cherub. Decorative wood engraved initials. Printed at the Elston Press, New Rochelle, New York. Play in three parts. Masque of Love is a play questioning matrimony and monogamy, reflecting Wood's views expressed in prose published in Pacific Monthly and other publications. "Charles Erskine Scott Wood led an extraordinary life, long, varied, and vital. Soldier, port, attorney, satirist, philosophical anarchist, reformer, bon vivant, boon companion, painter, art patron, bibliophile, and pacifist--C.E.S. Wood was all of these. Approaching the Renaissance ideal of the universal man, he packed into nearly 92 years of living three distinct careers and a remarkable variety of experiences, exhibiting a rare capacity for savoring life and a stunning diversity of talent, including a protean, at time profound, facility for the literary arts." (OSU Press). Binding rubbed and boards bent outward, slightly starting at top and bottom of inside front cover. Minor foxing on endpapers. Minor damp-staining. Binding in overall good-, interior in very good condition.

Seller: ERIC CHAIM KLINE, BOOKSELLER (ABAA ILAB), Santa Monica, CA, U.S.A.

Wood, Charles Erskine Scott. MASQUE OF LOVE.|A. Walter M. Hill, Chicago, 1904.

Price: US$210.00 + shipping

Description: 8vo. quarter cloth, paper spine label. (vi), 88, (xiv) pages. One of five hundred copies printed at the Elston Press of New Rochelle, New York. (Ransom no.20). Title page decorated with an arabesque bar and a small cherub. Initials of scene openings elaborately wood-engraved. Unopened, spine paper label soiled slightly, paper sides slightly soiled, slight foxing to first and last gatherings. Presentation from the author to Mr. Oswald Garrison Villard on the free endpaper. Mounted on the back pastedown is a small envelope containing a three-leaf letter from the author to Mr. Villard. The last book of the press. Some age darkening of covers around edges. Small ink ownership stamp on front pastedown. quarter cloth, paper spine label

Seller: Oak Knoll Books, ABAA, ILAB, NEW CASTLE, DE, U.S.A.

Wood, Charles Erskine Scott. A Masque of Love (Inscribed copy dated 1904). Walter M. Hill, Chicago, 1904.

Price: US$600.00 + shipping

Condition: Fine

Description: One of 500 unnumbered copies only. INSCRIBED ON THE FRONT FREE ENDPAPER "Mrs. Jas S. Inglis/ from CESW/ Oct. 1904". Grey paper covered boards over tan burlap spine, paper spine label. 88 pp. Printed at the The Elston Press. Generally fine, trace of rubbing to the extemities, touch of light foxing to the title page.

Seller: Old Book Shop of Bordentown (ABAA, ILAB), Bordentown, NJ, U.S.A.

Wood, Charles Erskine Scott; [O'Kane, Helen Marguerite] (Decorations). A Masque of Love. Walter M. Hill [Printed at The Elston Press], Chicago [New Rochelle, New York], 1904.

Price: US$750.00 + shipping

Condition: Very Good

Description: One of 500 copies, octavo size, 89 pp., inscribed by Charles Erskine Scott Wood twice, with MSS errata list. The first published work of literature by Charles Erskine Scott Wood (1852-1944), this copy inscribed twice by him; the first inscription to Albert Field Ehrgoth ("To My dear boy") is dated June 30, 1917; Albert, the son of Sara Bard Field, was killed in an automobile accident in 1918. Wood subsequently inscribed the book to "My darling daughter Kay" (Katherine, the daughter of Sara Bard Field, who would become a professor at Mills College) thus: "No copy of my book I could give would be so valuable as this one I gave to our beautiful winged Albert", dated July 20, 1920. Wood was a fascinating man; a self-proclaimed anarchist, he would become a prominent attorney in Portland, Oregon, where he became known for defending labor unions and other "radicals", including Margaret Sanger, the birth-control activist. As a young man he attended West Point; after graduation he participated in the Nez Perce War of 1877 and was present at the surrender of Chief Joseph of the Nez Perce - they became life-long friends and Wood became an advocate for Native American causes. Wood himself became a noted author of the day as well as a well-known landscape painter; he and Field lived from 1925 onwards in a home they built in Los Gatos named "The Cats", where would gather around them friends such as Chief Joseph, Eugene Debs, Robinson Jeffers, Margaret Sanger, and John Steinbeck. Wood and Field, who met in 1910 (having been introduced by Clarence Darrow) became a couple in 1918 and would finally marry in 1938. Sara Bard Field (1882-1974) was an untiring and noted suffragist and social reformer, as well as a poet. Sara became sensitive to social issues around 1902 and quickly became active; when she and her first husband moved to Oregon she joined the Oregon College Equal Suffrage League and was the only paid organizer for the suffrage movement in Oregon, traveling and speaking around the State. After divorcing her first husband in 1914, she moved to Berkeley where she joined the San Francisco Political Union, a radical splinter group of the National American Woman Suffrage Association; she would become a national figure in the movement and, while becoming a published author in 1927, would remain socially active her entire life. A lovely example of the work of the Elston Press, printed by them for Walter M. Hill, "a well-known Chicago bookseller who habitually commissioned books from America's finest printers" (Herbert H. Johnson, "Notes on the History of The Elston Press", p. 64). The book includes a woodcut headband and cartouche on the title page, and rubricated initial captial letters in two sizes, all designed by Helen Marguerite O'Kane, the wife of Clarke Conwell, the proprietors of The Elston Press; Helen would become known as "the most notable woman of the Arts and Crafts book" (n.b., from the web site of Michael and Winfred Bixler). ___DESCRIPTION: Quarter linen with grey paper boards, paper spine label with black lettering; the two inscriptions mentioned above on the flyleaf, a MSS errata list in Wood's hand facing the title page, headband and small title page illustration by H.M. O'Kane (unattributed), rubricated initial capitals throughout in two sizes; Elston Roman type on French Ingres D'Arches paper watermarked "MBM", octavo size (8.75" by 6"), pagination: [1-4] 5-88, [89, colophon]. ___CONDITION: Better than very good, the interior is near fine, clean and bright other than some light foxing to the first six to eight leaves, the signatures mostly unopened, the text block strong and square, and other than Wood's inscriptions and errata list free of prior owner markings; the binding is very good, the boards mostly clean with some light dustiness, the corners mildly rubbed, a bit of wear to the head of the spine, paper spine label sunned and with some chipping (no loss of text), the hinges with two very short tears to the endpaper at the gutter. Overall near fine internally with a very good binding, with the loving inscriptions by the author to his adoptive children. ___CITATION: Johnson no. 25. ___POSTAGE: International customers, please note that additional postage may apply as the standard does not always cover costs; please inquire for details. ___Swan's Fine Books is pleased to be a member of the ABAA, ILAB, and IOBA and we stand behind every book we sell. Please contact us with any questions you may have, we are here to help.

Seller: Swan's Fine Books, ABAA, ILAB, IOBA, Walnut Creek, CA, U.S.A.