Edité par E.P. Peabody, 13 West Street, Boston, 1842
Vendeur : Between the Covers-Rare Books, Inc. ABAA, Gloucester City, NJ, Etats-Unis
Edition originale
EUR 4 385,45
Autre deviseQuantité disponible : 1 disponible(s)
Ajouter au panierSoftcover. Etat : Near Fine. Three consecutive single issues in the original printed wrappers. Octavos. Vol. 3, No. 1: July, 1842 (pp. [1] 2-136); No. 2: October, 1842 (pp. [137] 138-280); No. 3: January, 1843 (pp. [281] 282-416). Issue nos. 2 and 3 have one or two small tears to the wrapper (no. 3 has about an inch torn away from the top corner of the back wrap), else all three issues are about near fine with light scattered foxing. Edited by Margaret Fuller (1840-42) and Ralph Waldo Emerson (1842-44), *The Dial* was one of the most important American literary magazines of the 19th Century, and also one of the scarcest, with a subscription list that "did not at any time reach three hundred names." It published many of their best-known literary works and critical writings, including reviews and translations. It also introduced the writings of Henry David Thoreau and other leading writers and social reformers connected with the Transcendentalist group and Brook Farm utopian community. This set of three consecutive issues contains several poems and essays by Emerson, as well as all three of his *Lectures on the Times:* ("Introductory Lecture"; "The Conservative"; "The Transcendentalist"). Also included are eight poems by Thoreau, and his *Natural History of Massachusetts*, as well as literary works and reviews by Margaret Fuller. An important and scarce run of three issues in original wrappers, the issues are usually encountered bound together. A detailed list of selected contributions is available.