Further Range

Robert FROST

Item#: 103268 We're sorry, this item has been sold

Further Range

“LIGHT WAS A PASTE OF PIGMENT IN OUR EYES”: A FURTHER RANGE, INSCRIBED BY ROBERT FROST WITH THE ENTIRE 21-LINE POEM "THE RUNAWAY" IN HIS HAND

FROST, Robert. A Further Range. Book Six. New York: Henry Holt, (1936). Octavo, original maroon cloth, original dust jacket.

First trade edition, second printing, of Frost’s Pulitzer Prize-winning collection of verse, inscribed by him with the poem "The Runaway" and signed by him with the additional inscription: "For Dr. F.B Sweet, Springfield, October 1937."

In this volume, Frost's lyrics, "though more playful in blending fact and fantasy, have beneath their frivolity a deep seriousness" (Hart, 269). A Further Range earned Frost the Pulitzer Prize for the best book of poetry published by an American author in 1936. Published the same year as the signed limited edition and the first trade edition. Crane A21.1. "The Runaway," which does not appear in this collection, was first published in the June 1918 issue of The Amherst Monthly and first appeared in book form in Frost's 1923 Selected Poems. The inscribed version here has variants in the last two lines: "When everything else has gone to stall and bin, Ought to be told to come and bring him in" replaces the published "When other creatures have gone to stall and bin, Ought to be told to come and take him in."

Interior fine; light fading to spine. Light wear to extremities of dust jacket with a one-inch closed tear at rear flap bottom fold. A nearly fine copy, most scarce inscribed with a poem.

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