Marino Faliero

BYRON

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Marino Faliero

“WHETHER AS FELLOW CITIZEN WHO SUES FOR JUSTICE, OR AS SOVEREIGN WHO COMMANDS IT, THEY HAVE DEFRAUDED ME OF BOTH MY RIGHTS”: FIRST EDITION OF BYRON’S MARINO FALIERO, 1821

BYRON, George Gordon, Lord. Marino Faliero, Doge of Venice. An Historical Tragedy, In Five Acts. With Notes. The Prophecy of Dante, A Poem. London: John Murray, 1821. Octavo, 19th-century full tan polished calf gilt, elaborately gilt-decorated spine, raised bands, brown and tan morocco spine labels, marbled endpapers, top edge gilt.

First edition, first issue of Byron’s Venetian drama, handsomely bound by Wood.

As he continued to work on the epic Don Juan, Byron also wrote, all in the fecund year 1821, the “mental dramas” Marino Faliero, Sardanapalus and The Two Foscari, “explorations in historical settings of the relationship between the powerful individual and the post-revolutionary state; he insisted that their neoclassicism unfitted them for stage representation and was angered when an unauthorized version of Marino Faliero failed at Drury Lane [theatre]” (Wolfson & Manning, xvi). Marino Faliero is “a well-documented historical drama about the Doge who turned traitor to the Venetian Republic. Byron was explicit about the fascination this larger-than-life betrayal held for him; soon after he arrived in Venice he had visited the Doges’ Palace and seen the black veil painted over Faliero’s likeness” (Eisler, 661-62). First issue, with the speech of the Doge on page 151 beginning “What crimes?” being five and one-half lines long. Bound without half-title. Randolph, 73. Wise II:29-30.

About-fine condition.

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