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T. E. Lawrence. The Diary of T. E. Lawrence, copy #92 of the extraordinary limited edition "The Diary kept by T. E. Lawrence while traveling in Arabia during 1911" and "the most ambitious and handsome volume published by the Corvinus Press". Corvinus Press, London, 1937.

Price: US$4400.00 + shipping

Description: This is a particularly well-preserved copy of the scarce and extraordinarily beautiful 1937 Corvinus Press limited first edition of The Diary of T. E. Lawrence, which has been called "the most ambitious and handsome volume published by the Corvinus Press." Of the entire edition of 203 copies, 130 were printed thus on sumptuous, mould-made "parchment substitute paper" with gilt top edge and untrimmed fore and bottom edges, bound with 13 tissue-guarded collotype plates of photographs "taken by the author during the time the diary was being written." These are bound in quarter brown leather with the gilt-stamped title bracketed by a gilt-stamped Corvinus Press crow at each end of the spine. The covers feature beautifully textured chirigami kozo boards with parchment corners. It was issued by the publisher in a seldom-seen brown card slipcase. This copy is hand-numbered "92" on the limitation page. Condition is exceptional, better than near fine in the publisher’s original card slipcase. The binding is square and tight with sharp corners, bright spine gilt, and no discernible sunning or soiling. Searching for flaws, we note only a trivial bit of superficial scuffing to the spine. The contents are likewise exceptionally clean with no previous ownership marks and no spotting. The top edge gilt remains bright. The slipcase has obviously done its job protecting the magnificent volume within. The slipcase is clean, unfaded, and fully intact, with modest scuffing, primarily to edges and corners, but no loss or splits to the seams. The T. E. Lawrence (1888-1935) achieved fame from his remarkable odyssey as instigator, organizer, hero, and tragic figure of the Arab revolt against the Ottoman Empire during the First World War, which he began as an eccentric junior intelligence officer and ended as "Lawrence of Arabia." However, Lawrence’s literary and intellectual reach far exceeded the world and words ofSeven Pillars of Wisdom.To the point, Lawrence’s friend and admirer Winston Churchill said:"Lawrence had a full measure of the versatility of genius He was a savant as well as a soldier.He was an archaeologist as well as a man of action.He was an accomplished scholar as well as an Arab partisan.He was a mechanic as well as a philosopher.His background of somber experience and reflection only seemed to set forth more brightly the charm and gaiety of his companionship, and the generous majesty of his nature."(Great Contemporaries, p. 166) Lawrence’s 1911 Diary is an early window on his observational astuteness and sensitivity, as well as the sheer physical endurance (he was "extremely ill the greater part of the time") that informed his intellect. After graduating from Oxford with a First in history, Lawrence was employed at an archaeological dig in Carchemish in Northern Syria. In 1911, while the dig was on a seasonal hiatus, Lawrence took a solitary walking journey through Syria, during which he kept a diary. This 1937 Corvinus Press limited edition not only published the diary for the first time, but also a poem written in 1914 to Lawrence by his brother, W.G. Lawrence (who was killed in 1915 while flying during active service in France), as well as three letters written by Lawrence to his mother during his Syrian journey. The Corvinus Press was founded in 1936 by Viscount Carlow, an active book collector and amateur linguist and typographer. The press published works by T. E. Lawrence, James Joyce, and other noteworthy literary figures. Carlow was killed in a 1944 airplane crash and the press was bought out the following year. Reference: O’Brien A194 First, finely bound, limited, and hand-numbered edition.

Seller: Churchill Book Collector ABAA/ILAB/IOBA, San Diego, CA, U.S.A.

Lawrence, T. E.. The Diary of T. E. Lawrence, 1911. London: Corvinus Press, 1937.

Price: US$5000.00 + shipping

Condition: Fine

Description: First edition, limited issue of 203 copies of which only 150 were for sale. This copy is number 35, marking it one of 40 printed on handmade Medway paper and bound in vellum. Illustrated with reproductions of photographs by T. E. Lawrence. Publisher's full vellum, lettered in gilt to front board and spine, stamped in gilt with publisher's device to rear board, two white silk ties, top edge gilt, other edges untrimmed; housed in the original white protective slipcase. About fine with just a few scuffs to the spine and foxing to tissue guards, silk ties with a few loose threads; slipcase significantly worn and split to top edge. Overall, an exquisite copy of this rare, beautifully produced book. While on a short break from an archaeological dig in Syria, Lawrence embarked upon a lone walking tour of the area. This limited edition publication takes its text directly his travel diary. Lawrence was an archaeologist, diplomat, army officer, and writer, and earned international fame for his well-written accounts of his travels and various roles in Middle Eastern conflicts during World War I. In 1962, his life was the subject of the Oscar-winning historical drama film Lawrence of Arabia. His accounts of the Ottoman region are undoubtedly informative and beautifully written, and contributed greatly to his later writing on the history and architecture of the area. The note from the publisher reads: "This diary was kept while the author was journeying through Northern Syria during 1911. It consists of notes jotted down whenever he had a moment to rest. As he travelled to most places on foot and was extremely ill the greater part of the time, the consistency of writing and spelling cannot be relied upon, especially as the original manuscript was kept in pencil in a small canvas-backed note-book and was never revised." The Corvinus Press was founded by typographer and book collector Viscount Carlow. The Diary is widely considered to be the most impressive and striking work ever published by Corvinus.

Seller: B & B Rare Books, Ltd., ABAA, New York, NY, U.S.A.

Lawrence, T. E.. THE DIARY OF T. E. LAWRENCE MCMXI. Corvinus Press, London, 1937.

Price: US$5968.95 + shipping

Description: Pp. [98], pictorial headpiece printed in gilt & black, plus 13 full page black & white captioned photographic illustrations, all with loose tissue guards; med. 4to; gilt lettered and decorated limp vellum with yapped edges and silk ribbon ties, a trifle marked; t.e.g., others uncut; within card slipcase which is slightly soiled and lightly worn at edges; Corvinus Press, London, 1937. First edition, limited to 203 numbered copies; this being one of 40 copies printed on 'Medway' paper hand made by J. B. Green & Son. O'Brien A194; Nash & Flavell (Corvinus Press) 16. *After graduating from Oxford with a First in history, Lawrence was employed at an archaeological dig in northern Syria. This is the text of a diary he kept during a solitary journey made on foot through Syria during the 1911 'off-season'. The photographs were also taken by Lawrence, and several of them are referred to in the text. The diary is preceded by a poem To T.E.L. written by his late brother, W. G. Lawrence, and followed by three letters written by T. E. Lawrence to his mother during his travels. The headpiece is after a drawing by Eric Kennington.

Seller: Kay Craddock - Antiquarian Bookseller, Melbourne, VIC, Australia