“THE WAR OF SPIRITUAL WITH NATURAL ORDER”: FIRST EDITION OF YEATS’ SECRET ROSE, 1897
YEATS, William Butler. The Secret Rose. With Illustrations by J.B. Yeats. London: Lawrence & Bullen, 1897. Octavo, original gilt-stamped pictorial blue cloth, uncut.
First edition, second issue, of Yeats’ collection of 17 stories—“visionary” in their Irish and Celtic origins— with frontispiece and six full-page illustrations by Jack Yeats, in lovely original cloth-gilt.
“Yeats’ life during these years was also transmuted into fiction (though more alchemically) in the occult stories… which came together as The Secret Rose in 1897… Yeats (who had read his Golden Dawn friend A.E. Waite’s work on Luficerism in France) wanted to parade ‘all the modern visionary sects’ before the reader, like the temptations of Saint Anthony. He was already determined to historicize his own era for posterity. The symbolic cover by Althea Gyles and dedication to Waite stressed their old alliance in mystic quests” (Foster, 176). Yeats described the stories in Secret Rose as “visionary” in their Irish and Celtic origins, and sharing a common “subject, the war of spiritual with natural order.” It is a work propelled by Yeats’ expressed conviction that “when one looks into the darkness there is always something there.” Containing 17 stories variously printed in magazines from 1892-6, appearing here in book form for the first time. Second issue, with unribbed blue cloth, publisher “A.H. Bullen” on spine end; according to Symons, the edition “probably consisted of 1000 copies.” As issued without dust jacket. Wade 21.
Slight rubbing to lower corners and foot of spine, gilt bright. A near-fine copy.