“TO ALL SPORTING AND PLUCKY GOLFERS OF OUR SEX”
MACKERN, Louie and BOYS, Mollie, editors. Our Lady of the Green (A Book of Ladies’ Golf). London: Lawrence and Bullen, 1899. Thick octavo, original pictorial green paper boards.
First edition of this engaging history of women’s golf in Britain, with brief biographies of the first professionals and chapters by Issette Pearson, founder of the Ladies’ Golf Union, and A. Bennet Pascoe, 1896 Ladies’ Champion.
“To the query, ‘Are women fitted by nature to be golfers?’ I must reluctantly give a carefully qualified affirmative in reply. For golf, more than any other game I know, seems to demand that quality which for want of a better word I must call ‘sportingness.’ This is not merely pluck, or a cool head, but it is made up of these and many other things; quick perception, a sensitiveness of eye and nerve, a rapid judgment, and the power of recognizing and seizing the psychological moment! These faculties are, I believe, more essential to the production of a good golfer than the possession of great muscular strength? Let us now consider the question of dress?” An American edition bound from the London sheets appeared the same year. Donovan & Murdoch 3500.
A fine bright copy, with only a few small splits to spine ends and rubbing to spine panel.