“WHAT A FUNNY SIGHT IT IS TO SEE A BROOD OF DUCKLINGS WITH A HEN!”: FINE FIRST EDITION OF THE TALE OF JEMIMA PUDDLE-DUCK, THE GREENILL-MARTIN COPY
POTTER, Beatrix. The Tale of Jemima Puddle-Duck. London: Frederick Warne, 1908. 16mo, original green boards, die-cut pictorial mounted centerpiece, pictorial endpapers.
Rare first edition of Potter’s much-loved story of one proud but foolish duck’s quest for a suitable nesting place, with frontispiece and 26 color illustrations. From the celebrated children’s literature collections of both Mildred Greenhill and H. Bradley Martin. A fine copy.
Set at Hill Top, Potter’s beloved farm in the Lake District, and starring a real duck who lived there, The Tale of Jemima Puddle-Duck “is not just a farmyard story… but a fable warning of the consequences of venturing into the unknown—and in quite unsuitable clothes” (Taylor et al., 133-34). “The year 1908 appears on the front of the title page of the first three printings, which are believed to be identical” (Linder, 427). Without scarce original dust jacket. Quinby 14. Bookplates of two renowned collectors of children’s literature, Mildred Greenhill (front pastedown) and H. Bradley Martin (verso of front free endpaper). Martin’s library in particular, which numbered some 10,000 volumes, was “one of the most magnificent private libraries to come to sale in [the 20th] century… Books were H. Bradley Martin’s consuming passion” (New York Times).
Interior quite fresh and clean. Spine mildly toned. A fine copy of one of the more elusive of Beatrix Potter’s first editions, with distinguished provenance.