FIRST COLLECTED EDITION OF TROLLOPE’S BARSETSHIRE CHRONICLES, HANDSOMELY BOUND
TROLLOPE, Anthony. Chronicles of Barsetshire. London: Chapman and Hall, 1878-84. Eight volumes. Octavo, early 20th-century three-quarter dark blue morocco, raised bands, marbled endpapers, top edges gilt.
First collected edition of Trollope’s wickedly humorous and wonderfully written Barsetshire Chronicles, with a lovely engraved frontispiece in each volume, handsomely bound by Bayntun.
Trollope’s “Barsetshire” series comprises five of his best-loved and most famous novels: The Warden, Barchester Towers, Doctor Thorne, Framley Parsonage, The Small House at Allington and The Last Chronicle of Barset, originally published 1855-67. Trollope came up with the idea of The Warden while he was on a walk in the area around Salisbury Cathedral and the book that resulted proved to be successful. “It revealed a new humorist and type of humour. No such picture of the special features of cathedral society had been given before, nor has anything so good been done since, excepting the corresponding portions of Barchester Towers and the rest of the Barsetshire novels…. These, however, are much more complex, Trollope having discovered that the same gifts which enabled him to portray clergymen were equally available for other classes of society. For humour, Barcester Towers perhaps stands first; for the suspense of painful interest, Framley Parsonage; for general excellence, The Last Chronicle of Barset. They stand at the head of his writings” (DNB). Sadleir, 245.
A bit of faintest foxing to cloth boards, spines uniformly toned to green. A lovely set in very nearly fine condition.