"QUITE EASILY THE MOST BEAUTIFULLY PRODUCED OF THE BOOKS THAT MERVYN ILLUSTRATED"
PEAKE, Mervyn (illustrator). Ride a Cock-Horse and Other Nursery Rhymes. London: Chatto & Windus, 1940. Slim quarto, original pictorial boards, original dust jacket.
First edition of this collection of 14 nursery rhymes, "assuredly Peake's most charming book," each rhyme accompanied by a full-page illustration by Peake, ten of which are hand-colored. A lovely volume, scarce and desirable in original dust jacket.
Ride a Cock-Horse, only the second book Peake illustrated, "was quite easily the most beautifully produced of the books that Mervyn illustrated. The war had started, but the paper shortage and the many restrictions connected with publishing hadn't yet begun to make their indelible and ugly mark on war-time books" (Maeve Gilmore, A World Away, 21). Ten of the 14 illustrations were hand-colored using stencils, "an unusual process for a commercial production and one that must have added considerably to the cost… The result was assuredly Mervyn's most charming book" (Winnington, Vast Alchemies, 119). Friend and poet Walter de la Mare wrote to Peake, "I have been engrossed in Nursery Rhyme pictures again and again. Fantasy and the grotesque indeed; a rare layer of the imagination, and a touch now and then, and more than a touch of the genuinely sinister… How many scandalized parents may have written to you, possibly enclosing doctor's and neurologist's bills, you will probably not disclose. Anyhow, most other illustrated books for children look just silly by comparison" (Gilmore, 22). Frances Bird, reviewing this volume in the New Statesman and Nation, wrote, "Mervyn Peake is a very singular artist, and his drawings make an eerie and indelible mark on the mind." The success of this book led Chatto & Windus to commission Peake to illustrate their edition of The Hunting of the Snark (1941). First issue, without dedication page.
Book fine, price-clipped dust jacket with just a tiny closed tear at spine head, bright and clean and very nearly fine. A lovely copy of this scarce early Peake title.