The Love-Lyrics and Songs of Proteus 1892
Printed by William Morris of the Kelmscott Press. London, 1892.
ONE OF 300 COPIES, 8vo, [ii], viii, 251, [1]. Printed in red and black throughout. Original vellum, spine lettered in gilt, silk ties. Binding marked and slightly buckled, silk ties mostly lost.
Together with a letter written on Crabbet Park Stud stationary, from the author, gifting the book to Ethel Anne Priscilla Grenfell, Baroness Desborough (née Fane; 27 June 1867 – 28 May 1952) a British society hostess and member of The Souls social group.
The Souls was a small loosely knit but distinctive elite social and intellectual group in the United Kingdom from 1885 to the turn of the century.
Wilfrid Scawen Blunt, a member of the group, described the aims and objectives of The Souls, and above all, what they wanted to avoid.
‘In my disappointment about Egypt I turned with redoubled zest to my social pleasures of the year before, and at this time saw much of that interesting group of clever men and pretty women known as the Souls, than whom no section of London Society was better worth frequenting, including as it did all that there was most intellectually amusing and least conventional’.
Wilfrid Scawen Blunt (born Aug. 17, 1840, Petworth House, Sussex, Eng.—died Sept. 10, 1922, Newbuildings, Sussex) was an English poet best known for his elegant erotic verse and his expression of anti-imperialism.
This is the third book printed by William Morris at the Kelmscott Press. Peterson notes that Wilfrid Scawen Blunt (1840-1922) bought the first ever copy of the first book Morris printed while they were having lunch together. By this point, the two had begun discussing reprinting some of Blunt’s work with Morris stipulating that he may have my own way about the getup, though Blunt requested the red initials. While printing, Morris said ‘I have one sheet and it looks very pretty & gay with its red letters, but I think I prefer mine in style of printing, and the extensive dual colour throughout ended up nearly doubling the cost of the presswork’. This was not the only hiccup, with Morris cancelling eighteen pages of text already printed because the poem in question, Natalia’s Resurrection? invited a wild letter from Margaret [Talbot] who imagined that the poem described the relations between herself and her husband and me, as Blunt wrote in his diary. Blunt likely also had an affair with Janey Morris, William’s wife, who not only corresponded with Blunt throughout printing, but also proof-read the entire book. This copy belonged to singer Mabel Batten (1856-1916), another of Blunt’s lovers. She has detailed on an envelope which poems in the collection were inspired by her, with corresponding lightly pencilled x by each poem. The song ‘Butterflies’ even has a printed note confirming ‘from words by M.B.’ Both Batten and Blunt were known for their sexual exploits: Batten may have had an affair with Edward VII (who gifted a book to her in 1901), and she later lived with Radclyffe Hall and is credited with bestowing Hall with the famous nickname John.
153mm x 208mm
R40,000