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Charles Dickens. Great Expectations. Charles Winthrope & Sons, 1861.

Price: US$250.00 + shipping

Condition: As New

Description: Facsimile edition of the first edition, originally published by Chapman and Hall in three volumes in 1861. The books are identical in every way to the originals with their stamped, decorated purple cloth covers, gilt lettering on the spines, and Chapman and Hall catalogue in the rear of Volume III. The books are spotless and show no signs of wear or damage. The contemporary gold dust jacket is merely included to protect the books' exteriors from dust. A beautiful addition to any book shelf of classic English literature. (Note: Photos may show a flash reflection.) PayPal always welcome. We pack all our books with care and ship in cardboard boxes. Shipment outside of the United States will require extra funds. Additional photos emailed upon request.

Seller: Planet Books, Signal Hill, CA, U.S.A.

Charles Dickens. Volume IV: All the Year Round. A Weekly Journal. Conducted By Charles Dickens. With which is Incorporated Household Words. From October 13 to March 23, 1961. Including No. 77 to No. 100.. Chapman & Hall, London, 1861.

Price: US$378.39 + shipping

Condition: Very Good

Description: One of the scarce early volumes, this volume IV containing the serialised first half of Great Expectations. Binding sound and tight, text generally clean, both free endpapers are torn, the front one is only half present, the rear double flyleaf has a large corner torn out of both. Easily repaired as no text affected. Leather supple and not threatening to split and with no powderiness. General minor shelfwear and dulling to the gilt titling, rubbing to corners and spine ends. Raised bands with gilt decorations. Leather title label present on spine. some waviness to pages, normal for this type of thin paper. Pages tanned with no sense of brittleness thereby. The marbled paper covering the boards is age darkened and shelfworn with the odd scuff. Overall a competent copy which won't need a fortune spent at the book doctor and has good shelf appeal as-is. Size: 4to

Seller: Book Bungalow, Edinburgh, United Kingdom

DICKENS, Charles. All The Year Round. A Weekly Journal: Volume IV. Chapman & Hall, London, 1861.

Price: US$500.00 + shipping

Description: Tall 8vo, original green cloth, decoratively blind-stamped, with spine lettering in gilt. London: Chapman & Hall, 1861. First Edition. Contains the first 28 chapters of "Great Expectations".

Seller: Argosy Book Store, ABAA, ILAB, New York, NY, U.S.A.

Dickens, Charles. All The Year Round, a Weekly Journal. 1860/1861. Volumes IV and V, containing all of Great Expectations. Issues 77-126. London. Chapman and Hall., 1861.

Price: US$2500.00 + shipping

Condition: Good

Description: 2 volumes. Both bound with green leather spines and corners, marbled paper over boards. The green leather spines are dried to dark brown and are flaking off. Volume numbers, 4 and 5, stamped in gold. The titles are nearly peeled off, showing only stamped lettering but no gold leaf, on paler green panels. Covers are all attached and bindings are tight, and laying flat, the books do not show any discouraging condition issues. Some rubbing and scuffed corners, but nothing out of the ordinary for books of this age. Bookplates on the inside front covers of both with the name Charles Reid and the image of a ship at sea. The name Emily Foot signed on the front endpaper. Volume 4 starts with issue 77, from October 13, 1860, and concludes with issue 100, March 23, 1860, plus the Christmas 1860 issue which has A Message from the Sea, in its entirety, at the end. 571 + 48 pages. Volume 5 contains issues 101 through 126 (March to September 1861). In addition to articles of general and literary interest, these two volumes contain Dickens's Great Expectations in their original, periodical, form. The first 28 chapters are in Volume 4 and chapters 29-58 are in volume 5. All of it is present here. Dickens had an ownership stake in the periodical, and when its sales started to decline, he began Great Expectations in its pages. It is his thirteenth book. It was published in book form later in 1861. Please email with questions or to request photos. Apart from pages toned from age (and a random chipped margin on one page, which I saw while flipping through but cannot find again), quite a nice clean copy.

Seller: Riverby Books, Fredericksburg, VA, U.S.A.

Dickens, Charles. Great Expectations (All the Year Round). Chapman & Hall, London, 1861.

Price: US$2500.00 + shipping

Condition: Fine

Description: First Edition of Volume IV of "Great Expectations" First Published in the "All the Year Round" weekly journal in two volumes. This set consists of the first volume IV but is missing volume V that completes the novel. Volume IV consists of Chapters 1-28. Volume V has Chapters 29-59, novel concludes on page 437 in Volume V. The book has been rebound in nice leather. The binding is tight and the boards are crisp. A lovely copy of this First appearance of Great Expectations in book form, before the publishing of the novel on its own. We buy Dickens First Editions.

Seller: Magnum Opus Rare Books, Missoula, MT, U.S.A.

DICKENS Charles. Great Expectations (volumes 1 & 2 only). Chapman and Hall, 1861.

Price: US$7054.70 + shipping

Description: Volumes 1 & 2 only of 3rd edition, in original publisher's blind-stamped violet cloth, with gilt author/title on spines. Published without adverts at rear. Ex W.H.Smith Library, with embossed stamp at corner of both front free end papers, with tipped-in WHS subscription library flyers dated 31st August. No other library indicators, or signs of much use. Armorial bookplate on both front pastedowns. Cloth on spine darkened, with wear at head & foot, & dulled gilt. A little discolouration at edges of boards. Pages white & clean. Will sell separately

Seller: Cotswold Internet Books, Cheltenham, United Kingdom

Charles Dickens. Great Expectations THREE VOLUMES. Chapman and Hall, London, 1861.

Price: US$7631.91 + shipping

Description: 8vo. 1861. 5th and last issue of first edition published October 30th with publishers' ads (as here), 1st November. Generally clean with occasional spotting. In original publishers' decorative ribbed cloth with spines relaid. Gilt dull but in spite of the aforementioned, a nice looking set. Images available on request.

Seller: Bath House Books, Ditchingham, United Kingdom

Dickens, Charles. Great Expectations. Chapman & Hall, London, 1861.

Price: US$8000.00 + shipping

Condition: Very Good

Description: First edition, second impression. (Stated "Second Edition" on all title pages. 344; 351; 344pp. Complete in three volumes. Contemporary leather with gilt ruling and lettering on spine. Bound without ads, quite likely as issued. Bibliographer Walter E. Smith describes printings two through five as indistinguishable except for their title pages, which may have been printed at the same time to give the impression of brisk sales. All had the same textual errors, etc.) Bindings edge-worn, leather starting to split along spine edges, hinges a bit tender, gilt barely legible. Internally Very Good with some light corner creasing, stray light stains and foxing. A very nice set of the classic novel.

Seller: Burnside Rare Books, ABAA, Portland, OR, U.S.A.

Dickens, Charles. Great Expectations.. Chapman and Hall, London, 1861.

Price: US$8800.00 + shipping

Description: First edition, second impression of Dickens’ popular Victorian bildungsroman. Octavo, bound in three quarter morocco over marbled boards with gilt tooling to the spine in three compartments within raised gilt bands, morocco spine labels lettered in gilt, marbled endpapers, all edges gilt. Second impression lacking the advertisements, quite likely as issued. Edition statements neatly removed from titles. In very good condition. Rare and desirable. Dickens' penultimate novel, Great Expectations, was written in "the afternoon of [his] life and fame" (G.K. Chesterton). The novel contains some of Dickens' most memorable scenes, including its opening, set in a graveyard, when the young orphan Pip is accosted by escaped convict Abel Magwitch. Upon its release, the novel received near universal acclaim. Although Dickens' contemporary Thomas Carlyle referred to it disparagingly as "that Pip nonsense," he nevertheless reacted to each fresh instalment with "roars of laughter." Later, George Bernard Shaw praised the novel, as "all of one piece and consistently truthful." During the serial publication, Dickens was pleased with public response to Great Expectations and its sales; when the plot first formed in his mind, he called it "a very fine, new and grotesque idea."

Seller: Raptis Rare Books, Palm Beach, FL, U.S.A.

Dickens, Charles. Great Expectations. Chapman and Hall, London, 1861.

Price: US$20000.00 + shipping

Condition: Near Fine

Description: First Edition, First Printing, fifth issue. Three volumes, including the publisher's catalog dated August 1861 at the rear of Volume III. Bound in the ORIGINAL publisher's ribbed purple cloth binding, with ruling and decorations in blind to boards, lettering and decorations in gilt to spine. Each volume with bright boards, toning to the spines, wear to the extremities, some light rubbing across. Volume I, with spine cracked at front hinge, former owner's signature to the dedication page. Volumes II and III each starting at front hinges, former owner's signature to the title pages. Each volume with otherwise intact spines and extremely bright and clean interiors. This copy has the majority of the first issue points, with only a few of the corrections that were made after the first issue. Overall, a clean and attractive set, extremely rare in the unsophisticated publisher's cloth. Smith I, 14. Great Expectations was originally published serially in All the Year Round, the author's literary magazine, in thirty-six weekly issues from December 1860-August 1861. It is one of Dickens' two novels that was not illustrated in the first book edition, the other being Hard Times. The first issue of the first edition, published on July 6, 1861, was followed by four subsequent issues of the same edition, published on August 5, August 17, September 21, and October 30 of the same year. Smith notes that "These first five issues were probably printed at a single impression and published with altered title pages to imply and encourage a rapid sale In all five issues, the same misprints persist." Thus, the first five issues are essentially the same first edition with varying title pages, printed simultaneously and issued in successive intervals. While some of the first issue's misprints were fixed, the corrections were not all-encompassing, yielding a variety of misprints and corrections in the first issues. For example, this volume contains some of the later issue corrections, but includes an earlier catalog that was also published in earlier issues. The first issue, which included a print run of 1,000 copies was "almost entirely taken up by the libraries," leaving only a few hundred copies for private ownership and increasing the rarity of a privately-owned later issue of the first printing. Great Expectations is Dickens' thirteenth novel. Like his 1850 novel David Copperfield, it is a bildungsroman that follows the protagonist's life from childhood to adulthood and is written entirely in the first-person. Great Expectations tells the story of a young orphan boy named Pip and his "great expectations" of becoming a gentleman and receiving his benefactor's wealth and property. A classic Victorian novel, Great Expectations features many of Dickens' recurring themes, including orphans, prison life, and Victorian society. Overall, a solid unrestored, uniform set, all original and not made up or supplied from other copies. An affordable copy in collector's condition. We buy Dickens First Editions!!!

Seller: Magnum Opus Rare Books, Missoula, MT, U.S.A.

Dickens, Charles. Great Expectations. Chapman and Hall, London, 1861.

Price: US$25000.00 + shipping

Condition: Near Fine

Description: First Edition, fifth issue. Three volumes, including the publisher's catalog dated August 1861 at the rear of Volume III. Bound in the publisher's original ribbed purple cloth binding, with ruling and decorations in blind to boards, lettering and decorations in gilt to spine. This copy has the majority of the first issue points, with only a few of the corrections that were made after the first issue. Overall, a clean and attractive set, extremely rare in the unsophisticated publisher's cloth. The first issue of the first edition book, published on July 6, 1861, was followed by four subsequent issues of the same edition, published on August 5, August 17, September 21, and October 30 of the same year. Smith notes that "These first five issues were probably printed at a single impression and published with altered title pages to imply and encourage a rapid sale In all five issues, the same misprints persist." The first issue, which included a print run of 1,000 copies was "almost entirely taken up by the libraries," leaving only a few hundred copies for private ownership. Overall, a beautiful unrestored, uniform set. Housed in a custom-made collector's slipcase.

Seller: Bookbid, Beverly Hills, CA, U.S.A.

Dickens Charles. GREAT EXPECTATIONS. London Chapman and Hall 1861, 1861.

Price: US$27500.00 + shipping

Description: 3 volumes. First Edition, fifth issue of the title-pages, but with virtually all first issue points of the First Edition, first impression, first state. Vol. III with "i" p. 193, "3" present as last digit in p. 103 in the text per Smith and Clarendon bibliographies and etc. With the August 1861 catalogue. 8vo, publisher’s original purple cloth lettered and decorated in gilt on the spines and in blind on the upper and lower covers. [iv], 344; [ii], 350; [ii], 344 pp. An unusually handsome, clean and fresh copy without repairs or sophistication. Light mellowing to the cloth from age, slight rubbing at the tips, hinges strong and quite tight with only slight evidence of age wear. The text block remains clean and in excellent condition. Very rare in this condition and state of preservation. HIGHLY IMPORTANT AND VERY RARE FIRST EDITION IN THE ORIGINAL CLOTH. "The rarity of the first issue of GREAT EXPECTATIONS has been attributed to the.fact that 'the first edition was almost entirely taken up by libraries." Patten, pp. 290-292, states that 1000 copies of the first issue and 750 of the second were printed and that probably most of the first and more than half of the second (1400 copies in all) were purchased by Mudies Select Library" (Smith, DICKENS IN THE ORIGINAL CLOTH). Even in 1932 Eckel lamented that "to obtain fine clean copies of this book has been the unsuccessful quest of many book collectors." Struggle between the various bibliographical arguments continues to this day with many holding to the points and positions formulated by Smith (see CHARLES DICKENS IN THE ORIGINAL CLOTH) while some argument is occasionally made that copies of the book must correspond to the specifications put forth in the Clarendon bibliography. But as the sampling of copies used in that bibliography was statistically too small to gain absolute information by which a definitive argument could logically be made for the entire first edition run, it remains the case that such data can be used logically to build an argument towards acceptance of the existence of one micro pattern only within the run and not therefore a finding which determines finally and clearly for the whole. Most experts today, continue to hold that Victorian printings and editions yielded to many factors during the binding process, not the least of which were economy and imprecision. It is likely that a Victorian publisher would most surely have used existing sheets when sewing together the gatherings before binding. Indeed, the specifications which are contained in the Oxford article seem to show that the textual points noted are of a very minor state and involve a change of or damage to a letter here or a word there, and as the editor Margaret Caldwell herself notes, "the clear conclusion is that there is no warrant for treating the five impressions as distinct editions: no authorial revision distinguishes one from another; blatant errors of substance remain uncorrected; a few errors and accidentals are corrected but many more remain." It is also noted that one copy at the Bodlean at Oxford University is mixed state within the text while having first edition, first issue title pages.

Seller: Buddenbrooks, Inc., Newburyport, MA, U.S.A.

DICKENS, Charles. Great Expectations In Three Volumes.. Chapman and Hall, London, 1861.

Price: US$27500.00 + shipping

Description: First edition in book form, first issue. Three octavo volumes (7 x 4 1/2 inches; 180 x 115 mm). [2], 344; [2], 351, [1, printer's imprint]; [2], 344 pp. With all first issue title-pages and all the internal flaws for the first issue called for by Smith, except for the two points in Volume III that Smith notes only appeared in Sadleir's copy ("3" missing in page number on p. 103, and first "i" missing in "inflexible" on p. 193, four lines up). More impressively, besides these two previous mentioned points, this set has all first issue points called for by Clarendon except volume III, page 220, line 16, the end of line hyphen is not faint. So 116 of 119 of Clarendon 's points, of which two are only in some copies. Bound without half-titles or advertisements. Three volumes uniformly bound by Bayntun in full red morocco. Boards ruled in gilt. Board edges tooled in gilt. Gilt dentelles. Spines stamped and lettered in gilt. All edges gilt. Marbled endpapers. Some light toning to a few pages. A few instances of light "dog-ear" creasing to upper corners. Overall a near fine set. Housed in a red cloth slipcase. One of only two Dickens novels never issued in monthly partsâ€"the typical method since Pickwickâ€"Great Expectations is also one of only two of his novels whose first editions weren't illustrated (in both cases, Hard Times is the other). Great Expectations first appeared in England in the pages of Dickens's popular magazine, All the Year Round, beginning on December 1, 1860 (though two American magazines, Harper's Weekly and the American All the Year Round began serializing it slightly earlier, technically jeopardizing Dickens's British copyright). "The rarity of the first issue of Great Expectations has been attributed to the probable small binding-up of copies with the first title-page, coupled with the fact (according to C.P. Johnson, Hints to Collectors, p. 33, and others later) that ‘the first edition was almost entirely taken up by the libraries.' Patten, pp. 290-92, states that 1,000 copies of the first issue and 750 of the second were printed and that probably most of the first and more than half of the second (1400) copies in all) were purchased by Mudie's Select Library" (Smith I, p. 104, note 5). Gimbel A146. Smith, Dickens, I, 14. Eckel, pp. 91-93. Clarendon, Cardwell. HBS 68805. $27,500.

Seller: Heritage Book Shop, ABAA, Beverly Hills, CA, U.S.A.

DICKENS, Charles. Great Expectations. Chapman & Hall, London, 1861.

Price: US$30781.65 + shipping

Condition: Very Good

Description: 3 vols. The volumes are internally clean, with the odd spot of pale foxing on a couple of leaves. Contemporary blue calf with red and maroon spine labels and gilt decorations on spine. Insignificant gilt loss to tooling to some parts of the spines. There is an ink name on each fly, slightly showing on verso, & ink stain on another leaf. An ornate paper1d stamp glued on each end paper, a 'Centenary Testimonial', headed "A Tribute to Genius 1812-1912" with Charles Dickens' portrait, within architectural columns. The stamp was issued by the Charles Dickens Centenary Testimonial Committee, and engraved and printed by Raphael Tuck and Sons. Includes a Dickens'-relevant cutting attached to one of the end papers, from the Auckland Weekly News. This is a very rare copy of an early printing of the first impression of the first edition, with, for example, the required bibliographic points present on pages 103, 192, and 193 of volume 3. A handsome set of the very rare 1st impression of the1st edition

Seller: Anah Dunsheath RareBooks ABA ANZAAB ILAB, Auckland, NZ, New Zealand

Dickens, Charles. Great Expectations [first edition, three volumes]. Chapman and Hall: London, 1861.

Price: US$31625.00 + shipping

Description: 3 vols. 8 x 5", violet embossed cloth, 344pp, 351pp; 344pp + 32pp publisher's catalogue, covers rubbed, extremities bumped and worn, spines sunned and cocked, hinges loose, vol. 1 eps spotted, contents a bit worn with some finger soiling, ink marks on ffep of vol. 2, vol. 2 rear fly creased else a nice set in a custom gilt-dec golden crushed morocco; cloth case by Bayntun-Riviere (though not stated as such- from a collection of Bayntun-Riviere signed bindings.) FIRST EDITIONS IN THE ORIGINAL CLOTH; volume 3 is a later state with the apostrophe on p. 173, and with period in heading on p. 238, BUT WITH ALL OTHER POINTS AS GIVEN IN THE WALTER E. SMITH BIBLIOGRAPHY INCLUDING THE MAY 1861 PUBLISHER'S CATALOGUE AT REAR OF VOLUME 3.

Seller: John K King Used & Rare Books, Detroit, MI, U.S.A.

Dickens, Charles. Great Expectations.. Chapman and Hall, London, 1861.

Price: US$45000.00 + shipping

Description: First edition, first impression of Dickens' rarest novel. Octavo, three volumes bound in full royal blue crushed levant morocco by Bayntun Bindery with gilt titles and tooling to the spine in six compartments within raised gilt bands, gilt ruling to the front and rear panels, gilt turn-ins and wide gilt inner dentelles stamp-signed by Bayntun, all edges gilt. The earliest impression of Dicken's rarest novel. This copy agrees in all points with Margaret Caldwell's extensive analysis of the differing impressions in the Clarendon edition of Great Expectations. As in the Lawrence Drizen copy sold in 2019 at Sotheby’s and in the Clarendon edition, the third volume here contains the numeral “3” in the pagination on p. 103, and the initial “i” in “inflexible” on p. 193, which are sometimes missing in copies of the first impression of the third volume, indicating thatÂthe present copy is among the earlier printings of the first impression. Smith comments that “the rarity of the firstÂissue ofÂGreatÂExpectationsÂhas been attributed to the probable small binding-up of copies with theÂfirstÂtitle-page, coupled with the fact (according to C.P. Johnson, “Hints to Collectors”) that “theÂfirstÂedition was almost entirely taken up by the libraries.” Only 1,000 copies of theÂfirstÂissue and 750 copies of the second were printed and that probably most of theÂfirst and more than half of the second (1400 copies in all) were purchased by Mudie’s Select Library. Eckel, pp. 91-93; Sadleir 688; Smith I:14. In fine condition. An exceptional example of one of Dickens' great masterpieces. Dickens' penultimate novel, Great Expectations, was written in "the afternoon of [his] life and fame" (G.K. Chesterton). The novel contains some of Dickens' most memorable scenes, including its opening, set in a graveyard, when the young orphan Pip is accosted by escaped convict Abel Magwitch. Upon its release, the novel received near universal acclaim. Although Dickens' contemporary Thomas Carlyle referred to it disparagingly as "that Pip nonsense," he nevertheless reacted to each fresh instalment with "roars of laughter." Later, George Bernard Shaw praised the novel, as "all of one piece and consistently truthful." During the serial publication, Dickens was pleased with public response to Great Expectations and its sales; when the plot first formed in his mind, he called it "a very fine, new and grotesque idea."

Seller: Raptis Rare Books, Palm Beach, FL, U.S.A.

DICKENS, Charles. Great Expectations In Three Volumes.. Chapman and Hall, London, 1861.

Price: US$45000.00 + shipping

Description: First edition in book form, first issue according to Smith. Three octavo volumes. [4], 344; [2], 351, [1, printer's imprint]; [2], 344 pp. plus 32 pp. advertisements, dated May, 1861. With the first issue title-pages and with all the internal flaws for the first issue called for by Smith, except page 173 in volume III has an apostrophe in "there's." There are a four more points however that Smith notes which do not occur in every copy. Our set does not have the two points in Volume III that Smith notes only appeared in Sadleir's copy ("3" missing in page number on p. 103, and first "i" missing in "inflexible" on p. 193, four lines up). However, our set does have the two other points which are that there is a period after the headline on page 236 in volume III and also a dot over the 'i" on page 278, volume II. However, according to Clarendon, we have some points of the first issue, but most are second. Original moderate violet wavy-grain cloth with covers decoratively stamped in blind and spines ruled in blind and decoratively stamped and lettered in gilt. Spines a bit sunned and extremities of boards and spines lightly rubbed. Occasional signature slightly sprung. Front inner hinge of volume III professionally restored, others with hairline cracks. Overall, an almost fine set in every way. Housed together in a blue morocco pull-off case by Riviere & Son. One of only two Dickens novels never issued in monthly parts- the typical method since Pickwick- Great Expectations is also one of only two of his novels whose first editions weren't illustrated (in both cases, Hard Times is the other). Great Expectations first appeared in England in the pages of Dickens's popular magazine, All the Year Round, beginning on December 1, 1860 (though two American magazines, Harper's Weekly and the American All the Year Round began serializing it slightly earlier, technically jeopardizing Dickens's British copyright). "The rarity of the first issue of Great Expectations has been attributed to the probable small binding-up of copies with the first title-page, coupled with the fact (according to C.P. Johnson, Hints to Collectors, p. 33, and others later) that 'the first edition was almost entirely taken up by the libraries.' Patten, pp. 290-92, states that 1,000 copies of the first issue and 750 of the second were printed and that probably most of the first and more than half of the second (1400) copies in all) were purchased by Mudie's Select Library" (Smith I, p. 104, note 5). Smith I, 14. Eckel, pp. 91-93. Gimbel A146. HBS 68722. $45,000.

Seller: Heritage Book Shop, ABAA, Beverly Hills, CA, U.S.A.

DICKENS, Charles.. Great Expectations.. London: Chapman and Hall, 1861, 1861.

Price: US$109027.22 + shipping

Description: First edition, first impression, published on 6 July 1861; both the rarest and most valuable of Dickens's works, and, arguably, his greatest. Copies in the original cloth are particularly desirable. Five impressions of the first edition were printed, each of the latter four with a new edition statement on the title page. The modern bibliographical authority is the table given in Appendix D to the Clarendon edition, 1993, in which Margaret Cardwell agrees with the traditional conclusion that the same setting of type was used for all five impressions: "there is no warrant for treating the five impressions as distinct editions" (p. 491). However, she deduces the impressions were sequential and that minor corrections and gradual deterioration of type can be shown across the five impressions, allowing the first impression to be identified even when the title page is tampered with or absent. Patten states that 1,000 copies of the first impression were printed and that probably most of these copies were purchased by Mudie's Select Library where, as circulating library copies, they inevitably suffered a high rate of attrition, leading to their renowned rarity. This copy contains the earliest state of every point outlined in the Clarendon edition. The third volume here contains the numeral "3" in the pagination on p. 103, and the "i" in "inflexible" on p. 193, which are sometimes missing in copies of the first impression of the third volume, indicating that the present copy is among the earlier printings of the first impression. This copy also has the early reading of vol. 3, p. 192, with "himself" and "very carefully" on separate lines. Smith, I, 14 (but superseded by Clarendon); Sadleir 688; Wolff 1799. Robert L. Patten, Charles Dickens and His Publishers, 1978. 3 volumes, octavo. Original violet wavy-grained cloth, spines lettered in gilt, covers with floral decoration within linear border stamped in blind, cream endpapers. Housed in a custom blue cloth folding box. Vol. III bound without 32pp. catalogue. Monogram bookplates, "P.H.G." (or "H.P.G."); afterwards in the library of Sir Brent Gration-Maxfield, his ownership inscriptions dated 1974, his sale, Sotheby Parke Bernet, 9-10 Feb. 1981, lot 72. Some expert repairs at foot of spines, relined at an early date with matching yellow contemporary paper, rubbing and slight staining to cloth, faint shadow of removed labels to front covers, spines and edges darkened, some minor spotting at ends, closed marginal tear at vol. II, N6, corner repair to vol. III, I2.

Seller: Peter Harrington. ABA/ ILAB., London, United Kingdom