Dong with a Luminous Nose

Edward LEAR   |   Edward GOREY

Item#: 113917 We're sorry, this item has been sold

Dong with a Luminous Nose
Dong with a Luminous Nose

“THEN, THROUGH THE VAST AND GLOOMY DARK, THERE MOVES WHAT SEEMS A FIERY SPARK”: EDWARD LEAR’S DONG WITH A LUMINOUS NOSE, SIGNED BY ILLUSTRATOR EDWARD GOREY

LEAR, Edward. The Dong with a Luminous Nose. Drawings by Edward Gorey. New York: Young Scott, (1969). Slim oblong octavo, original pictorial taupe boards, original dust jacket.

First edition of famed illustrator Gorey’s interpretation of Lear’s nonsense poem, signed on the title page by Gorey.

Edward Lear started his career at the age of 15, drawing ornithological pictures. "From 1832 to 1836 he was engaged at Knowsley, the residence of the Earl of Derby…With the family at Knowsley he was always a great favorite, and it was for his patron's grandchildren that Lear invented his droll Book of Nonsense, which was first published in 1846" (DNB). The Dong with a Luminous Nose is a continuation of Lear's story of The Jumblies, which Gorey illustrated in 1968. "Except for the headpiece drawing of the Dong himself, Lear didn't illustrate this… it is as much an artist-poet's as an artist-illustrator's undertaking: the waves curling against the rocks like ghostly fingers, the beams of the luminous Nose shooting through a broad bare-armed tree—while nearby stands, from summer, a single rattan chair… For The Jumblies Gorey designed a divertissement, light, playful, impulsive; for The Dong he provides a threnody—a great furrowed mass, a ribbon of light, a pendent sky, one bright lost figure" (Bader, 557-58). Of his own writings, "Gorey maintains that his stories are simply entertainments in the nonsense tradition of Lewis Carroll and Edward Lear" (Silvey, 278). With this volume, he pays homage to one of his forebears. Toledano B42a.

Book fine, near-fine dust jacket with only minor wear to spine extremities.

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