“CALLING AMERICA BACK TO ITS OWN UNFULFILLED PROMISE”: BLACK RIDERS, STEPHEN CRANE’S FIRST BOOK ISSUED UNDER HIS NAME
CRANE, Stephen. The Black Riders and Other Lines. Boston: Copeland and Day, 1895. Square 12mo., original cream paper boards, uncut and partially unopened.
First edition of the first book issued in Crane’s name, his first book of poetry, with 78 poems evoking an often unsettling vision, one of only 500 copies, scarce in original paper boards.
Stephen Crane’s pioneering first book of poetry, written in free verse, was early seen as shocking and sacrilegious. His 78 poems “were attacked for their apparent barbarism, their want of art” (Hoffman, Many Red Devils, 590). Critics have since viewed in his images of “open deserts and isolated visions… a peculiarly American resonance… calling America back to its own unfulfilled promise, in a language at once figural and historical” (Bercovitch & Patell, 310). One of only 500 copies, the first book published under Crane’s name. With its elegant cover design, “the unconventional appearance of the book attracted as much attention as Crane’s iconoclastic epigrams” (Grolier 3). Issued together with presentation copies printed on Japan vellum with plain covers (50 copies), three in morocco: no priority established. As issued without dust jacket. Preceded by the pseudonymously published Maggie. BAL 4070. Starrett 2. Bruccoli & Clark, 79.
Text generally fresh with scattered foxing, faint toning to edges of fragile boards. An extremely good copy of this important work.