“SHADES OF HEROES, FAREWELL!”: VERY RARE FIRST ISSUE OF BYRON’S FIRST BOOK, HOURS OF IDLENESS, IN ORIGINAL BOARDS
BYRON, George Gordon, Lord. Hours of Idleness, A Series of Poems, Original and Translated. Newark: S. and J. Ridge, 1807. Thin octavo, late 19th-century brown cloth spine, original drab paper boards, paper spine label, uncut. Housed in a custom chemise and slipcase.
First edition, rare first issue of Byron’s first published work, in original drab paper boards.
“In every Bookseller’s I see my own name, & say nothing, but enjoy my fame in secret,” the 19-year-old Bryon wrote to a friend after the publication of this book (Eisler, 134). In addition to a number of Byron’s poems that appeared only a few months earlier in the privately printed chapbooks Fugitive Pieces (November 1806) and Poems on Various Occasions (January 1807), Hours of Idleness (June 1807) contains 12 new poems and several translations of Catullus, Euripides and others. Although Hours of Idleness received mixed critical reviews, this volume marked the public beginning of one of the most admired poets in English literature and quickly ran to a second edition in March 1808 under the title Poems Original and Translated. Rare first issue, in crown octavo (uncut leaves measuring approximately 4 3/4 by 7 1/2 inches), with paper watermarked 1806 and with all points as called for in Randolph. Randolph, 9. Wise I:7-8. Hayward 218. Owner signature; bookplate of noted bibliophile Frank Brewer Bemis.
Lacking front free endpaper. A fine copy of this early Byron rarity.