Sonnets from the Portuguese

Elizabeth Barrett BROWNING

Item#: 87720 We're sorry, this item has been sold

Sonnets from the Portuguese
Sonnets from the Portuguese
Sonnets from the Portuguese

“HOW DO I LOVE THEE? LET ME COUNT THE WAYS”: LIMITED EDITION OF SONNETS FROM THE PORTUGUESE, ONE OF ONLY 505 COPIES SIGNED BY ARTIST AND DESIGNER RALPH FLETCHER SEYMOUR

BROWNING, Elizabeth Barrett. Sonnets from the Portuguese. Chicago: Ralph Fletcher Seymour, (1899). Slim octavo, original full vellum gilt, uncut and partially unopened.

Limited edition of Elizabeth Barrett Browning’s famous love poems, number 9 of only 15 copies printed on Japanese Vellum (out of a total edition of 505 copies) by Marsh & Grant from plates made from drawings on each page lettered and designed by Ralph Fletcher Seymour and also signed by him on the limitation page, in original full vellum-gilt.

This exceptional limited edition of Sonnets from the Portuguese was specially designed by American artist Ralph Fletcher Seymour. Seymour, known for his work in the Arts and Crafts Movement as well as for his interest in Native American culture, also worked extensively in book illustration. This work reflects the influence of the Arts and Crafts Movement on Seymour and his borders, initials, and vignettes are clearly inspired by the work of his predecessors such as William Morris. Written as a gift for Elizabeth Barrett’s husband, Sonnets from the Portuguese “describes the growth and development of her love for Robert Browning, at first hesitating to involve him in her sorrowful invalid life, then yielding to gradual conviction of his love for her, and finally rapturous in late-born happiness. The title, chosen to disguise the personal nature of the poems by suggesting that they were a translation, was a secret reference for the Brownings to his nickname for her, ‘The Portuguese,’ based on her poem ‘Catarina to Camoens,’ which Browning particularly admired and which portrayed a Portuguese woman’s devotion to her poet lover” (Drabble, 920). This sonnet sequence first appeared in a collected edition of Browning’s poems published in 1850.

Interior fine, light wear, toning and pinpoint foxing to extremities of vellum, slight bowing to vellum as usual. An extremely good copy.

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