Palace of Pleasure

William PAINTER

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Palace of Pleasure
Palace of Pleasure

“RANSACKED TO FURNISH THE PLAYHOUSES OF LONDON”: DELUXE LIMITED EDITION OF THE PALACE OF PLEASURE, ONE OF 60 SETS

PAINTER, William (translator). The Palace of Pleasure. London: David Nutt, 1890. Three volumes bound in six. Folio (10 by 13 inches), mid-20th century three-quarter burgundy morocco, elaborately gilt-decorated spines, raised bands, top edges gilt, uncut.

Deluxe limited edition of this rich source of plot for Shakespeare and other Elizabethan dramatists, number 52 of only 60 sets on hand-made paper, signed by the publisher, handsomely bound.

"The influence of the fabliau gave place to that of the erotic novella in William Painter's great collection of 101 tales, The Palace of Pleasure… Painter's dedicatory epistle informs us that his original purpose had been to prepare a collection of classical tales out of Livy. The first stories are of that general character… but Livy's 'majesty' offered difficulties and Painter turned to the more congenial task of introducing Englismen to the love stories of Boccaccio, Bandello, Queen Margaret of Navarre and other modern novellieri" (Baugh et al., 413). "Painter's book was extremely popular, and deservedly so; he was a born storyteller, often improved on his plots and was a clear, direct and vivid writer" (Kunitz & Haycraft, 390). Many Elizabethan prose authors tried their hands at the "novel" form of these tales, but the book exerted even greater influence on playwrights: more than 40 of them drew on these stories, most notably Shakespeare. The Bard "found here the source of All's Well That Ends Well, and also, it may be, his first acquaintance with the stories of Lucrece, Coriolanus, Timon of Athens and Romeo and Juliet" (Baugh et al., 413). The anti-theatrical polemic writer Stephen Gosson complained that The Palace of Pleasure "was ransacked to furnish the playhouses of London" (DNB). First published in two volumes (1566 and 1567). This edition "follows page for page and line for line the privately printed and very limited edition [of 172 copies] made by Joseph Haslewood in 1813" (Preface). Old pencil shelf numbers.

Interiors generally clean. Mild staining to front board of Volume 6; gilt bright. An elegant, wide-margined copy in very nearly fine condition.

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