FIRST APPEARANCE OF POE’S “THE PIT AND THE PENDULUM,” IN ORIGINAL DELUXE PUBLISHER’S GIFT BINDING
POE, Edgar Allan. The Gift: A Christmas and New Year’s Present. Philadelphia: Carey and Hart, 1843 (eg, 1842). Octavo, original full straight-grain dark green calf, elaborately gilt-decorated spines and covers, all edges gilt. Housed in a custom clamshell box.
First edition, containing the first printing of Poe’s story “The Pit and the Pendulum.”
Poe’s masterpiece of horror, set during the Spanish Inquisition, appears on pages 133 through 151 of this publisher’s annual “Christmas book.” Poe would reprint the story in his own Broadway Journal in May, 1845, but it would not appear in a collection of Poe stories until after the author’s death, in an 1850 edition compiled by Rufus Wilmot Griswold. This issue of The Gift also includes the story “The Lover’s Leap” by Henry William Herbert, identified as ‘the Author of Cromwell, etc.’ and engraved title page, frontispiece and six plates. “For most readers Poe is a byword for horror, and his work has spawned innumerable imitations. But his memorable phrases and frightening images so permeate our culture that we now simply take him for granted. During the battle of Verdun in 1916, for example, a French soldier wrote that the night bombardment made him think of ‘The Pit and the Pendulum,’ ‘of that nightmare room of Edgar Allan Poe, in which the walls closed in one after the other” (Meyers, 281). One of Poe’s imitators was Joseph Conrad, who used a variation on Poe’s infernal devices in the 1913 Spanish-Gothic short story “The Inn of the Two Witches.” Heartman & Canny, 69. BAL 16137. Contemporary gift inscription and owner annotation to front flyleaves; contemporary owner signatures.
Occasional scattered foxing to interior, expert repair to one plate. Expert restoration to extremities of lovely original binding, gilt quite bright. Near-fine condition.