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Hultoniana [Cover title]. London: mid-18th century. Manuscript in ink in at least two period hands, inscribed in ink on the front free endpaper by the author Graham Greene (inscription undated but likely 1940s): "This was the source for my essay A Hoax on Hulton in The Last Childhood. In this way, when it was published in the Spectator I recuperated [sic] myself for the five guineas I had spent at David Low's shop off St. Martin's Lane. Graham Greene." Period vellum over boards, titled in ink on the upper cover and spine. 7 3/4 x 6 3/8 inches (19.5 x 16 cm); 135 pp. with 67 letters or dialogues, [8 pp.] index, plus blank leaves at the end; written in several hands in ink, the letters copied within dating January–December 1744. Laid-in is a postcard to Graham Greene from R. N. Green-Armitage of the Bath Royal Literary and Scientific Institution, regarding some of the individuals mentioned in the manuscript, dated November 8, 1939; and two letters by Sir Ambrose Heal, the designer, businessman and antiquary, on the same subject. Binding worn and soiled, front board bowed, becoming disbound, lacking some leaves in the middle and at the end as described by Greene in his essay on the manuscript.
The bizarre, protracted, and rather cruel practical joke outlined in this manuscript was the basis for Graham Greene's entertaining essay A Hoax on Mr. Hulton, first printed in The Spectator and later reprinted in The Lost Childhood and Other Essays, London: Eyre, 1951, as Greene notes in his annotation. Greene purchased it from his friend, the redoubtable bookseller David Low, for whose memoirs With All Faults Greene later wrote the introduction.
Greene was unable to establish the authorship of the manuscript, but as he writes in the essay "It is hard to believe that any innocent person could have known so much," a judgment with which we concur. It takes the form of a copybook for a series of letters by Hulton and others, creating in essence an epistolary account of the hoax, and it includes additional dialogues that are claimed in one place to be recorded "verbatim from memory." There are marginal notes on the behavior of the characters from someone who seemingly had inside knowledge of the matter "Mr. Jer. Pierce, who was a man of humor, sent Hulton, ten letters one after another, and drove him, into his usual fury & distraction." Poor Hulton, who was a London printseller and frame-maker of some prominence, together with his wife and son, was beset for months by deliveries of goods and services that he had not ordered, and the repercussions drove him to the point of near-insanity.
Greene rejoiced in the minutiae of eighteenth-century tradesman's London revealed in these pages, and Sir Ambrose Heal helped him identify some of the (most likely unwitting) participants, who included such eminences as the great engraver and antiquary George Vertue. Greene's amusing essay does not disclose how the hoax ended—how could it, as the last leaves of the manuscript are torn away?—but he provides a wonderful and evocative summary of Hulton's various misadventures, and those he visited on others as a consequence of his growing (and justifiable) paranoia.
Für Doyle New York Versandinformtation bitte wählen Sie +1 2124272730.
NEW YORK, NY -- Doyle will present an auction of Rare Books, Autographs & Maps on Friday, April 11, 2025 at 10am. The sale includes an extensive collection of illustrated books and fine bindings, many from a private collection purchased at auction in the 1970s and off the market until the present time. Here are copies of the first edition of Nerciat’s erotic classic Le Diable au Corps, and an early and curiously illustrated edition of the exceedingly naughty Academie des Dames. From the same collection comes a splendid Levitzky binding with batik endpapers on a work illustrated by Georges Barbier, with an original watercolor by the master. Many finely bound sets are featured in the sale, most notably an exceptionally luxurious set of Charles Dickens, one of 15 copies bound in sixty volumes, in superb red levant morocco with onlays.
As usual, the sale includes a selection of interesting maps and atlases, such as a copy of Turgot’s 1734 bird’s eye plan of Paris, and a finely colored celestial map by Andreas Cellarius. Additionally, there is a sizable group of globes and instruments in the auction, including a pair of 15-inch library globes and a 20-inch celestial globe by Cary, as well as three English pocket globes, a “dissected” paper globe, and a collection of rare pocket-sized navigational instruments and sundials, notably an exquisite 17th century silver “Butterfield” type sundial by the Parisian instrument maker Pierre Sevin.
One lot that bears special note is the Latin grammar owned by the young Henri de Toulouse-Lautrec, used by him while studying for his baccalaureate examination. In this, the artist has penned hundreds of tiny ink sketches, ranging from studies of horses to caricatured faces. Toulouse-Lautrec was 16 to 17 years old at the time, and his genius was just starting to declare itself, evident in the precocious studies of horses in this work, which make the annotations far more compelling than mere juvenalia.
Also, in the auction are selections of Americana, travels and voyages, and a wide range of early printing. In this last category, a complete copy of Graevius’s great 1722 work on Venice is offered, the Splendor Magnificentissimae Urbis Venetiarum Clarissimus with the two large folding plates of the city and all the double-page views of piazzas and palazzos.
The Collection of President Gerald R. Ford and First Lady Betty Ford
Property from the Collection of President Gerald R. Ford and First Lady Betty Ford offers approximately 75 lots of signed books and memorabilia relating to the political career of President Ford and watches, jewelry, and decorative items owned by and gifted to the Fords. Of note is Gerald Ford’s copy of the Official Report of the Warren Commission, of which he was a member, inscribed to him with appreciation from President Lyndon Johnson and each member of the commission. It was John “Jack” Ford who brought George Harrison to the White House, the first of the Beatles to visit, and offered in the sale are two inscribed books on Eastern thought. Of the jewelry, President Ford’s Omega and Piaget watches are offered, as is a sapphire ring that belonged to First Betty Ford. Among the gifts presented to the Fords on their world travels are jewelry items and keepsakes from Jordan and Oman, several in high karat gold. View Lots
Order of Sale
Lots 1–8 Sports and mountaineering
Lots 9–45 Americana
Lots 46–57 Travel
Lots 58–73 Maps and atlases, globes and instruments
Lots 74–114 Antiquarian books and manuscripts
Lots 115–120 Economics and the World Wars
Lots 121–163 Literature (including literary autographs)
Lots 164–178 Color plate books
Lots 179–189 Library sets
Lots 190–215 Fine bookbindings: English, French and Russian
Lots 216–220 Fore-edge paintings
Lots 221–233 Curiosa
Lots 234–249 Limited Editions Club
Lots 250–261 Private press and fine printing
Lots 262–276 Illustration and children's books
Lots 277–280 Applied Art
Lots 281–306 Books on Fine Art and Livres d'artistes
Lots 307–318 American autographs
Lots 319–340 American Presidential documents and signatures
Lots 340–End Property from the Collection of President Gerald R. Ford and First Lady Betty Ford
Terms & Conditions
SHOW MORESale Notice
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Hultoniana [Cover title]. London: mid-18th century. Manuscript in ink in at least two period hands, inscribed in ink on the front free endpaper by the author Graham Greene (inscription undated but likely 1940s): "This was the source for my essay A Hoax on Hulton in The Last Childhood. In this way, when it was published in the Spectator I recuperated [sic] myself for the five guineas I had spent at David Low's shop off St. Martin's Lane. Graham Greene." Period vellum over boards, titled in ink on the upper cover and spine. 7 3/4 x 6 3/8 inches (19.5 x 16 cm); 135 pp. with 67 letters or dialogues, [8 pp.] index, plus blank leaves at the end; written in several hands in ink, the letters copied within dating January–December 1744. Laid-in is a postcard to Graham Greene from R. N. Green-Armitage of the Bath Royal Literary and Scientific Institution, regarding some of the individuals mentioned in the manuscript, dated November 8, 1939; and two letters by Sir Ambrose Heal, the designer, businessman and antiquary, on the same subject. Binding worn and soiled, front board bowed, becoming disbound, lacking some leaves in the middle and at the end as described by Greene in his essay on the manuscript.
The bizarre, protracted, and rather cruel practical joke outlined in this manuscript was the basis for Graham Greene's entertaining essay A Hoax on Mr. Hulton, first printed in The Spectator and later reprinted in The Lost Childhood and Other Essays, London: Eyre, 1951, as Greene notes in his annotation. Greene purchased it from his friend, the redoubtable bookseller David Low, for whose memoirs With All Faults Greene later wrote the introduction.
Greene was unable to establish the authorship of the manuscript, but as he writes in the essay "It is hard to believe that any innocent person could have known so much," a judgment with which we concur. It takes the form of a copybook for a series of letters by Hulton and others, creating in essence an epistolary account of the hoax, and it includes additional dialogues that are claimed in one place to be recorded "verbatim from memory." There are marginal notes on the behavior of the characters from someone who seemingly had inside knowledge of the matter "Mr. Jer. Pierce, who was a man of humor, sent Hulton, ten letters one after another, and drove him, into his usual fury & distraction." Poor Hulton, who was a London printseller and frame-maker of some prominence, together with his wife and son, was beset for months by deliveries of goods and services that he had not ordered, and the repercussions drove him to the point of near-insanity.
Greene rejoiced in the minutiae of eighteenth-century tradesman's London revealed in these pages, and Sir Ambrose Heal helped him identify some of the (most likely unwitting) participants, who included such eminences as the great engraver and antiquary George Vertue. Greene's amusing essay does not disclose how the hoax ended—how could it, as the last leaves of the manuscript are torn away?—but he provides a wonderful and evocative summary of Hulton's various misadventures, and those he visited on others as a consequence of his growing (and justifiable) paranoia.
Für Doyle New York Versandinformtation bitte wählen Sie +1 2124272730.
NEW YORK, NY -- Doyle will present an auction of Rare Books, Autographs & Maps on Friday, April 11, 2025 at 10am. The sale includes an extensive collection of illustrated books and fine bindings, many from a private collection purchased at auction in the 1970s and off the market until the present time. Here are copies of the first edition of Nerciat’s erotic classic Le Diable au Corps, and an early and curiously illustrated edition of the exceedingly naughty Academie des Dames. From the same collection comes a splendid Levitzky binding with batik endpapers on a work illustrated by Georges Barbier, with an original watercolor by the master. Many finely bound sets are featured in the sale, most notably an exceptionally luxurious set of Charles Dickens, one of 15 copies bound in sixty volumes, in superb red levant morocco with onlays.
As usual, the sale includes a selection of interesting maps and atlases, such as a copy of Turgot’s 1734 bird’s eye plan of Paris, and a finely colored celestial map by Andreas Cellarius. Additionally, there is a sizable group of globes and instruments in the auction, including a pair of 15-inch library globes and a 20-inch celestial globe by Cary, as well as three English pocket globes, a “dissected” paper globe, and a collection of rare pocket-sized navigational instruments and sundials, notably an exquisite 17th century silver “Butterfield” type sundial by the Parisian instrument maker Pierre Sevin.
One lot that bears special note is the Latin grammar owned by the young Henri de Toulouse-Lautrec, used by him while studying for his baccalaureate examination. In this, the artist has penned hundreds of tiny ink sketches, ranging from studies of horses to caricatured faces. Toulouse-Lautrec was 16 to 17 years old at the time, and his genius was just starting to declare itself, evident in the precocious studies of horses in this work, which make the annotations far more compelling than mere juvenalia.
Also, in the auction are selections of Americana, travels and voyages, and a wide range of early printing. In this last category, a complete copy of Graevius’s great 1722 work on Venice is offered, the Splendor Magnificentissimae Urbis Venetiarum Clarissimus with the two large folding plates of the city and all the double-page views of piazzas and palazzos.
The Collection of President Gerald R. Ford and First Lady Betty Ford
Property from the Collection of President Gerald R. Ford and First Lady Betty Ford offers approximately 75 lots of signed books and memorabilia relating to the political career of President Ford and watches, jewelry, and decorative items owned by and gifted to the Fords. Of note is Gerald Ford’s copy of the Official Report of the Warren Commission, of which he was a member, inscribed to him with appreciation from President Lyndon Johnson and each member of the commission. It was John “Jack” Ford who brought George Harrison to the White House, the first of the Beatles to visit, and offered in the sale are two inscribed books on Eastern thought. Of the jewelry, President Ford’s Omega and Piaget watches are offered, as is a sapphire ring that belonged to First Betty Ford. Among the gifts presented to the Fords on their world travels are jewelry items and keepsakes from Jordan and Oman, several in high karat gold. View Lots
Order of Sale
Lots 1–8 Sports and mountaineering
Lots 9–45 Americana
Lots 46–57 Travel
Lots 58–73 Maps and atlases, globes and instruments
Lots 74–114 Antiquarian books and manuscripts
Lots 115–120 Economics and the World Wars
Lots 121–163 Literature (including literary autographs)
Lots 164–178 Color plate books
Lots 179–189 Library sets
Lots 190–215 Fine bookbindings: English, French and Russian
Lots 216–220 Fore-edge paintings
Lots 221–233 Curiosa
Lots 234–249 Limited Editions Club
Lots 250–261 Private press and fine printing
Lots 262–276 Illustration and children's books
Lots 277–280 Applied Art
Lots 281–306 Books on Fine Art and Livres d'artistes
Lots 307–318 American autographs
Lots 319–340 American Presidential documents and signatures
Lots 340–End Property from the Collection of President Gerald R. Ford and First Lady Betty Ford
Terms & Conditions
SHOW MORESale Notice
Katalog
Stichworte: Graham Greene, Brief, Manuskript