“THE MOST AUTOBIOGRAPHICAL OF HIS POEMS”: 1814 FIRST EDITION OF BYRON’S CORSAIR, HANDSOMELY BOUND
BYRON, George Gordon, Lord. The Corsair, a Tale. London: John Murray, 1814. Octavo, late 19th-century full green straight-grain morocco gilt, raised bands, marbled endpapers, top edge gilt, uncut.
First edition of Byron’s narrative poem about the pirate Conrad, handsomely bound by Bedford.
“In his dedication to Tom Moore, Byron acknowledged to his friend and fellow poet that The Corsair was the most autobiographical of his poems… Conrad, the corsair, is the pirate as intellectual. He may be feared as an outlaw, but his real authority derives from ‘the power of Thought-the Magic of the Mind!’ and his ‘glance of fire’ is the only heroic aspect in a physical form that otherwise boasts ‘little to admire.’ The poem is haunted by two women-Medora, Conrad’s blonde betrothed, and Gulnare, the dark slave favorite of the ruler Seyd… Politically, The Corsair throbs with hatred. By casting his hero in the anarchic role of outlaw, Byron has defined the perspective of the poem. The only moral response to the corruption of ‘legitimate’ government-Regency England or post-Napoleonic France-lies with the individual who defines his own morality” (Eisler, 410-12). The poem was an immediate success. Publisher John Murray wrote to Byron: “I sold on the day of publication, a thing perfectly unprecedented, 10,000 copies-and I suppose 30 people who were purchasers (strangers) called to tell people in the Shop how much they had been delighted and satisfied” (Eisler, 415-16). Randolph’s second issue, without imprint on bottom of page 100 (Randolph, 33-37). Originally printed as 108 pages, the second and third issues were released without the last four leaves containing “To a Lady Weeping,” because of the controversy the poem had excited. However, Randolph states that all four of the four “issues” of the first edition were available and issued to the public on the same day. Bound with half title but without two leaves of publisher’s advertisements. Wise I:92-95. Armorial bookplate.
Interior fine; extremities very lightly rubbed. A fine copy.