“I BECAME DRUNK WITH THE BEAUTY AND SINGING RHYTHM OF IT”: FIRST EDITION OF O’NEILL’S LONG DAY’S JOURNEY INTO NIGHT
O'NEILL, Eugene. Long Day’s Journey into Night. New Haven: Yale, 1956. Octavo, original half gray cloth, original dust jacket.
First edition of O’Neill’s tragic masterpiece, described by him as a “play of old sorrow, written in tears and blood,” published posthumously, with Carlotta O’Neill’s photographic image of O’Neill on the dust jacket.
Representing a turning point in Eugene O’Neill’s work that allowed “him to bring to a close his two decades of mourning” over his past, the first draft of Long Day’s Journey into Night was completed in 1940 and on their twelfth wedding anniversary, “O’Neill gave the manuscript to [his wife] Carlotta with a dedication… acknowledging that it was a ‘play of old sorrow, written in tears and blood… meant as a tribute to [her] love and tenderness.” After further revisions, however, and amidst an incident over several missing manuscripts that involved Carlotta’s disputed rights over them, O’Neill delivered a sealed copy of the play to his editor Bennett Cerf in 1945 with instructions prohibiting Random House from publishing it until 25 years after his death, and further specifying that no advance “be paid before ‘the said publication date.” This unusual restriction ultimately “gave O’Neill a hold over Carlotta that would work as long as he lived, even if he should be declared incompetent,” and would make it very hard for her to solely “capitalize on the play” (Black, 447, 483). Two years after O’Neill’s death, however, Carlotta, who possessed the legal rights to his literary estate, withdrew the manuscript from Random House over Cerf’s objections and presented it to Yale University Press, which published the play in an edition of 5000 copies in February 1956. Hammerman 64. Atkinson A42.
Book fine; lightest edge-wear to near-fine dust jacket.