Poems

William WORDSWORTH

Item#: 101372 We're sorry, this item has been sold

Poems
Poems

“OF SPLENDOUR IN THE GRASS, OF GLORY IN THE FLOWER”: RARE 1807 FIRST EDITION OF WORDSWORTH’S POEMS, BEAUTIFULLY BOUND BY WORSFOLD

WORDSWORTH, William. Poems, in Two Volumes. London: Printed for Longman, Hurst, Rees, and Orme, 1807. Two volumes. Slim octavo, early 20th-century full purple morocco, elaborately gilt-decorated spines and covers, raised bands, all edges gilt.

Scarce first edition, mixed issue (Volume I first issue, Volume II second issue), containing the original text of the “Ode to Duty” with the extra stanza (omitted after this printing), one of only 500 copies printed. With half titles and erratum leaf.

Contains much of Wordsworth's best, and best-known, verse, including first appearances of "Resolution and Independence" (I:89), "The World is Too Much With Us" (I:122) and "Intimations of Immortality" (II:147). Wordsworth explained that inspiration for this latter poem "rests entirely upon two recollections of childhood, one that of a splendor in the objects of a sense which is passed away, and the other an indisposition to bend to the law of death as applying to our particular case. A Reader who has not a vivid recollection of these feelings having existed in his mind cannot understand that poem." Also in this edition is the first publication of "My Heart Leaps Up" (II:44), containing the lines which would later become the epigraph for the "Ode": "The child is the father of the man; / And I could wish my days to be / Bound each to each by natural piety." First issue of Volume I, with period after "Sonnets" on page [103] of Volume I. Second issue of Volume II, with "function" spelled correctly on page 98 of Volume II. Both half titles present, as is the erratum leaf. Healey 19. Broughton, 2. See Parrish, Cornell Wordsworth (Curtis, Poems, in Two Volumes).

Light scattered foxing to text, binding fine and beautiful. A lovely copy in near-fine condition.

add to my wishlist ask an Expert