Picture of Dorian Gray

Oscar WILDE

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Picture of Dorian Gray

“IN HER DEALINGS WITH MAN DESTINY NEVER CLOSES HER ACCOUNTS”: THE FIRST PUBLICATION OF OSCAR WILDE’S PICTURE OF DORIAN GRAY, IN LIPPINCOTT’S MONTHLY MAGAZINE, JULY 1890

WILDE, Oscar. The Picture of Dorian Gray. Published in Lippincott’s Monthly Magazine, July 1890. London: Ward, Lock, 1890. Octavo, original printed stiff paper wrappers respined; housed in a custom clamshell box.

First appearance of Oscar Wilde’s only novel, in Lippincott’s Monthy Magazine, substantially different from the text which appeared in book form a year later.

Considered Wilde’s greatest work, The Picture of Dorian Gray is also his only novel, combining the supernatural elements of the Gothic novel with the sins of French decadent fiction. Wilde’s “theme is not, as is often supposed, art’s divorce from life, but its inescapable arraignment by experience. His creative works almost always end in unmasking. The hand that adjusts the green carnation suddenly shakes an admonitory finger. While the ultimate virtue in Wilde’s essays is in make-believe, the denouement of his dramas and narratives is that masks have to go. We must acknowledge what we are. Wilde at least was keen to do so. Though he offered himself as the apostle of pleasure, his created world contains much pain” (Ellmann, xvi). Although Wilde claimed, “I wrote this book entirely for my own pleasure… Whether it becomes popular or not is a matter of absolute indifference to me,” he also responded to the critics who attacked the work for its immorality: “Leave my book, I beg you, to the immortality that it deserves.” Between this first magazine publication and the novel’s appearance in book form in 1891, Wilde added six chapters and numerous variations to the text. The July 1890 issue of Lippincott’s Monthly Magazine appeared first in London, followed just a few days later by the American issue. With blue paper slip announcing August issue contents bound between the “Notice to Contributors” page and the first page of Dorian Gray, as called for. Mason 81.

Interior fine. Wrappers with expert restoration. A very good copy of a Wilde rarity.

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