Rustic Elegies, Edith Stiwell — 1st Edition/Printing
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Condition
Fine: An exceptionally well-preserved example. Original dust jacket shows sunning to the spine, together with faint marks across the panels. Otherwise excellent, with cover artwork bright, vibrant, and highly attractive. Jacket now protected in a plastic sleeve. Publisher’s original black cloth binding with red lettering displays only a few faint marks and light curling to the corner tips. Upper edge of the text block dust toned, though otherwise clean with crisp page edges. Very light foxing to the endpapers. Frontispiece immaculate, with pages internal remaining clean and tidy throughout.
Description
First edition, first printing published by Gerald Duckworth and Company, London, 1927. An early poetry collection by Edith Sitwell, one of the defining literary figures of British modernism. Early Sitwell first editions in original dust jacket are increasingly desirable, particularly examples preserved in superior condition.
Rustic Elegies gathers lyrical and reflective poetry blending pastoral imagery, musical language, and modernist sensibility, demonstrating Sitwell’s distinctive poetic voice and stylistic experimentation during the interwar period.
Book Condition: Fine
Book Authors: Edith Sitwell
Book Publisher: Duckworth
Book Language: English
Narrative Type: Fiction
Genre: Poetry
Book edition: First Edition
Signed: No
Book Pages: 98
Book Publication Year: 1927
Book Publication Date:
Book Binding: Cloth
Illustrator:
Book Series:
Country/region of manufacture: London, United Kingdom
Book Dimensions:
Book Condition Guide
| Condition | Description |
|---|---|
| New | A brand-new, unread and professionally handled book. Carefully preserved from publication to purchase, these books are offered in the best attainable condition. This grade applies to recently published titles that have not entered long-term storage. |
| As New | The book is in pristine, original condition as if just published. No signs of use or handling. The dust jacket (if present) is equally flawless. This grade applies to any book that has remained untouched in storage for years. |
| Fine | The book is close to As New. It remains bright and attractive, but could show minor imperfections to the boards and/or dust jacket (if present). Its pages are typically clean and unmarked. |
| Near Fine | The book has a number of small flaws, i.e. slight rubbing to the edges, or tiny chips or creases to the dust jacket (if present). Its pages may have faint marks, or creases that are barely perceptible — nothing that detracts from their overall condition. |
| Very Good | The book maintains its structural integrity, and has no major flaws such as tears to its binding or pages. It may, however, show signs of careful use, handling, or storage — small marks and creases, light foxing. Its dust jacket (if present) remains fully intact, but small tears may be present. |
| Good | A book that remains intact and readable with complete text pages, but shows moderate signs of wear and use to both the book and dust jacket (if present). It may have noticeable creases, nicks, or stains, and the spine likely shows fading, bumping, and rubbing. There could be writing, underlining, and other marks on some pages, though the majority will be clean and tidy. |
| Fair | A book with significant wear or damage. The text pages will be complete, but there may be heavy underlining, highlighting and staining throughout, and the book’s endpapers, half-title, and copyright pages could be damaged or missing. The binding could be loose, and the dust jacket (if present) may have notable scuffs or tears. These copies are usually of interest for content, signature(s) or scarcity. |
| Poor | A heavily worn book whose value lies in its complete and legible text. A poor book will have substantial defects — loose joints or hinges, detached covers, loose and/or missing pages, and could be heavily soiled. A poor book is also known as a reading copy, and although compromised, can hold historical or bibliographic significance. |
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