FIRST EDITION OF THE CLASSIC STUDY OF MAGIC AND RELIGION, THE GOLDEN BOUGH, 1890, INSCRIBED BY FRAZER TO ALICE ROOSEVELT LONGWORTH
FRAZER, James George. The Golden Bough: A Study in Comparative Religion. London: Macmillan, 1890. Two volumes. Octavo, original green cloth gilt sympathetically rebacked, Volume II with original spine laid down; housed in a custom cloth slipcase.
First edition of Frazer’s landmark anthropological study, inscribed in Volume I: “Inscribed to Mrs. Nicholas Longworth with the good wishes of James George Frazer, 27th March 1933.”
Frazer began his work “merely… to explain the strange rule of the priesthood or sacred kingship of Nemi and with it the legend of the Golden Bough, immortalized by Virgil,” but the project grew over the years into “a vast and enterprising comparative study of the beliefs and institutions of mankind, offering the thesis that man progresses from magical through religious to scientific thought. Its discussion of fertility rites, the sacrificial killing of kings, the dying god, the scapegoat, etc., and its analysis of the primitive mind, caught the literary imagination, and its influence may perhaps be seen most lastingly in the works of D.H. Lawrence, T.S. Eliot, and Pound” (Drabble, 212). With frontispiece after John Martin in Volume I. PMM 374. Garrison & Morton 184. Alice Roosevelt Longworth, the outspoken eldest child of President Theodore Roosevelt, married Congressman Nicholas Longworth in 1906.
Interiors fine. Expert restoration to spine ends of Volume II; Volume I spine is a perfect match to the original cloth spine. Light rubbing to extremities. An exceptionally good presentation copy with wonderful provenance.