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Sylvie and Bruno/Sylvie and Bruno Concluded.

by CARROLL, Lewis.
London, Macmillan, 1889 & London, Macmillan, 1893., 1893. First editions. 8vo. Frontispiece and forty five illustrations by Harry Furniss; 5 pages of publisher's advertisements at end. Full gilt stamped red morocco by Scroll Club, spines with raised bands, gilt ruled edges, gilt ruled inner dentelles, a.e.g. (with original cloth bound in). Very good-fine. Later black cloth slipcase. Both signed and inscribed by Carroll on half-title pages to Alice Wilson Fox. The first in purple ink; the second in black ink. "Sylvie and Bruno": "Alice Wilson Fox from her old friend the Author. Jan. 8, 1890." "Sylvie and Bruno Concluded": "Alice Wilson Fox, with the Author's affectionate regards. Dec. 27, 1893." Alice Raikes (later Mrs. Wilson-Fox) was the daughter of Lewis Carroll's cousin, and may have been the inspiration for Carroll's "Alice" character (see the entry in Lewis Carroll's diary for August 17, 1868, wherein Lewis records his visit with Alice Raikes and the further development of "Through the Looking Glass"). The editor, Roger L. Green, comments after this entry: "It was probably during this stay in the house at Onslow Square that a chance meeting with his little cousin Alice Raikes helped Dodgson to the additional realization of the peculiarities of 'Looking-Glass House,' which gave still greater verisimilitude to the new 'Wonderland' which he was then inventing for his own dream-child.".. Signed by Author(s). F. Hardcover. [Attributes: First Edition; Signed Copy]
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Autograph Letter Signed

Autograph Letter Signed

by CARROLL, Lewis
Christ Church, Oxford, 1891. ("C.L. Dodgson"), in black ink on bifold leaf, 3 1/2 pages, 3 1/2" x 5 1/2", Christ Church, Oxford, July 16, 1891. Fine fresh example. To Sir Robert H. Collins: A good letter to an aid to Her Royal Highness the Duchess of Albany with reference to Maggie Bowman, her sibling and a stage performance of "Alice in Wonderland". Carroll seeks to have the Duchess meet Maggie and her two sisters (Nellie and Empsie) hoping to get her a royal audience and approval. Dodgson had a good deal to do with putting the Bowman sisters and brother on the stage and with their great success. He first encountered Isa, who had a small part in the original stage production of Alice, at a rehearsal, and before long was taking her on day outings and on visits to Eastbourne. In the course of their friendship he naturally met the other Bowman children, three younger sisters and a brother. With Dodgson's help all went on to act professionally - the girls to full-time stage careers. See page 710 in Cohen: "The Letters," for much more information on the Bowman family. Not in "The Letters", but see page 851 for a letter July 16, 1891 to Ethel Hatch referring to Isa. [Attributes: Signed Copy]
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THE HUNTING OF THE SNARK

THE HUNTING OF THE SNARK

by CARROLL, LEWIS
WHITE INK, 1975. Book. Illus. by RALPH STEADMAN. Fine. Hardcover. Signed by Author(s). FIRST. Title page, limitation page, and 6 etched plates interleaved with archival tissue in black cloth portfolio. 32x47 cm (12x18"). No. 17 of 65 copies. First Edition. Title page and each plate signed and numbered in pencil by the artist. Superb limited edition suite of Steadman's etchings, which were reproduced as illustrations in the 1975 Studio Vista edition of Lewis Carroll's The Hunting of the Snark. Etchings printed on 140 lbs. J. Green Mould made rag paper..
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Alice's Adventures In Wonderland

Alice's Adventures In Wonderland

by Carroll, Lewis
Pennyroyal Press, West Hatfield, 1982. 145 pages. Folio, 42.5 x 27.5 cm. Limited edition, copy 67 of 350 printed on Pulegium paper specially made for Pennyroyal by Strathmore Paper Company, and signed by Moser, accompanied with an extra suite of signed plates in a separate portfolio each plate signed in pencil by Moser. Seventy-five wood-engravings, including one double-page, by Barry Moser. Text printed in red, blue and black, title calligraphy by G. G. Laurens. Moser's skill and eloquence as an artist, as well as a fine craftsman presented here. One of the most well-regarded productions from an important press. Illustrated by Barry Moser with a Preface and Notes by James R. Kincaid. Text edited by Selwyn Goodacre. PENNYROYAL 26. Publisher's half purple morocco, ruled in gilt, over marbled boards. Smooth spine decoratively tooled and lettered in gilt. Decorative endpapers in yellow and white. The additional suite of prints in a linen portfolio. Housed together in the publisher's quarter purple morocco clamshell case. Components in fine condition, slipcase front cover toned. Very good [Attributes: Signed Copy; Hard Cover]
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ORIGINAL PEN-AND-INK PORTRAITS OF THE MAD HATTER, DORMOUSE, and MARCH HARE AT THE MAD TEA PARTY (From the 1929 Alice's Adventures In Wonderland By Lewis Carroll Illustrated By Willy Pogany

ORIGINAL PEN-AND-INK PORTRAITS OF THE MAD HATTER, DORMOUSE, and MARCH HARE AT THE MAD TEA PARTY (From the 1929 Alice's Adventures In Wonderland By Lewis Carroll Illustrated By Willy Pogany

by Pogány, Willy (Lewis Carroll)
Dutton, 1929. Carroll, Lewis (Charles Lutwidge Dodgson). Willy Pogány (Hungarian/American, 1882-1955). ORIGINAL PEN-AND-INK PORTRAITS OF THE MARCH HARE, MAD HATTER and DORMOUSE (From his illustrated 1929 Alice's Adventures In Wonderland published by E. P. Dutton). These marvelous drawings illustrate "The Mad Tea Party" chapter and grace pages 102 and 103. The images are both 4.75" x 3.5" situated in two corners of a large sheet of 11" by 14" heavy art paper. Pogány has printed his name in full on the March Hare drawing at the top right and initialed the Mad Hatter drawing at the lower left. His lightly penciled outline and notations can also be seen. The detail in the drawings is spectacular in comparison to the actual printed book (see published drawing for comparison). In a Victorian-Style frame with museum glass. Unique. [Attributes: First Edition; Signed Copy]
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The Hunting of the Snark. An Agony in Eight Fits.

The Hunting of the Snark. An Agony in Eight Fits.

by DODGSON, Charles L. (Lewis Carroll)
London: Macmillan & Co., 1876. FIRST EDITION & PREPUBLICATION PRESENTATION COPY. 1 vol., illustrated by Henry Holiday, inscribed in black ink on the half-title "James Hessey from the Author. Mar. 19. 1876". Bound in the publisher's special prepublication binding of red cloth, spine relined, inner hinges renewed, back corners rubbed, general overall handling, all edges gilt, 'Burn' binders ticket to rear pastedown, not as bad as it may sound, still a GOOD copy. Pencil note to half-title stating "Given to Gillian in 1952 by her grandfather, James Dodgson Hessey, son of James Hessey above." The Rev. James Augustus Hessey (1814-1892) was Headmaster and Church of England Clergyman, was born in London, and was the son of a bookseller and printer. [Attributes: First Edition; Hard Cover]
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Doublets: a word-puzzle

Doublets: a word-puzzle

by CARROLL, Lewis [Dodgson, Charles Lutwidge]
London: Macmillan and Co., 1879. FIRST EDITION, FIRST ISSUE. Original red publisher's cloth paneled in blind, gilt title on upper cover, slight soiling. An excellent presentation copy inscribed in purple ink, "Mrs. Neate from the Author." Preserved in a modern burgundy cloth box with red morocco sides, gilt lettered.
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Alice's Adventures in Wonderland

Alice's Adventures in Wonderland

by Carroll, Lewis [Charles Lutwidge Dodgson]
Macmillan and Co, London, 1866. 192pp. Duodecimo [22 cm] rebound in gilt-stamped dark red morocco with raised spine bands. Binding pristine. Includes original pale blue free endpapers, now serving as flyleaves. Calligraphic ink name dated May 1st, 1866 on original front free endpaper, reinforcements to the edges of several leaves, light to moderate foxing throughout. With forty-two illustrations by John Tenniel. The first published edition, re-set from a copy of the recalled first issue. Williams, Madan, Green 46. The publication of Carroll's work appeared at a time when children's literature was produced primarily to teach moral lessons. Carroll's tale was, by contrast, wonderfully fantastical and nonsensical, and the book baffled critics at first. By the close of the 19th century, "Alice's Adventures in Wonderland" and "Through the Looking Glass" had become the most popular children's books in England. Two decades later, the Alice story grew to be one of the most celebrated works of fiction in the English language throughout the world. [Attributes: First Edition; Hard Cover]
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3 page autograph letter signed (ALS) to Kate Terry Lewis.

3 page autograph letter signed (ALS) to Kate Terry Lewis.

by DODGSON, Charles Lutwidge; [Lewis Carroll].
Oxford: Christ Church, July 4, 1893. A FINE LETTER TO SIR JOHN GIELGUD'S MOTHER. 3 pages (folded), minor remnants of mounting to rear fold, otherwise in EXCELLENT CONDITION, autograph letter signed, 6-13/16" x 5-1/2", in black ink, Christ Church dated July 4, 1893 to Kate Terry Lewis which reads: "My dear Katie, Though I am quite distracted with business, & am making desperate efforts to get things settled here, & get off to my usual quarters at Eastbourne, still I must find a few minutes to offer you the very sincere wishes of an old friend that your married life may be a bright & peaceful one, and that you and your chosen husband may love each other with a love, second only to your love of God, & far above your love of any other object. For that is, I believe, the only essential for a happy married life: all else is trivial compared with it. You surely do not expect a "love lorn creature" like me - a wretched old bachelor - to cloud the happy day by his sombre presence? You might as well expect a screech-owl to come out in the noon-day, & disport himself in your beautiful garden! With an old man's love, I am, Affectionately yours, C. L. Dodgson" Kate Terry Lewis married Frank Geilgud on July 18, 1893. She was the mother of Val and the actor Sir John Gielgud. As her mother, Florence, had been before her, 'Katie' became one of Dodgson's favorite young friends. As with other favorites, marriage marked the end of his dominion, and he studiously avoided attending his favorite's weddings. (See Cohen p.469). This letter is published on p.964 of "The Letters of Lewis Carroll" An important and poignant letter with excellent association.
Offered by D & D Galleries
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  • £4,900.00
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Alice's Adventures in Wonderland

Alice's Adventures in Wonderland

by Lewis Carroll
Pennnyroyal Press, West Hatfield MA, 1982. Moser's Alice joins the ranks of the earlier spectacular Alices: Tenniel, Rackham, Dali: not only do the 75 images dance and sprawl across the pages, but they reflect new visions of the text. These images range from marginalia to images merged into the text, to full page and on to two page spreads. The text is printed in black, with highlighted words in red or blue. Moser's signature is in purple, as is the limitation number, 157 of 350. The book is half bound in purple morocco with boards covered in a coordinating hand marbled paper, from the workshop of Gray Parrot. The type was cast and composed by Michael and Winifred Bixler. Further hand composition was done by Arthur Larson. Text and blocks were printed by Harold McGrath on Puligeum, a paper specially made for Pennyroyal by the Strathmore Paper Company. The clamshell case is quarter bound in morocco with cloth covered sides. The extra set of 75 prints, each signed by Moser, is enclosed in a matching cloth covered portfolio. A cover letter to the Reader from Moser explains the status of the prints in the portfolio. The prints produced for the copies of the book are fine, but some of the blocks cracked when they were put through the press for a second run. At this point, Moser decided to continue to print the second set as is--there was no time to re-do the blocks. The book and portfolio are fine, the box fine, with some discoloring and rubbing to the spine of the box (see the photographs). Gray Parrot binding half bound in purple Morocco with boards covered in a coordinating hand marbled paper [Attributes: Signed Copy; Hard Cover]
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Lettre autographe signée à son ami [Alban] Gibbs

Lettre autographe signée à son ami [Alban] Gibbs

by CARROLL, Charles Lutwidge Dodgson, dit Lewis
1882. 3 pages petit in-12 (153 x 96 mm), à l encre bleue. Lewis Carroll se penche sur le théâtre et sur Shakespeare. Jolie lettre au cours de laquelle Carroll évoque une production londonienne du Rob Roy de Walter Scott - il approuve le jeu de la comédienne qui interprète le rôle de Diane Vernon et partage l'opinion de son correspondant au sujet de la compagnie - puis expose son projet d un voyage à Londres pour assister à une production récente de Much ado about nothing de Shakespeare au Lyceum, avec Henry Irving et Ellen Terry, dont le Daily News dit le plus grand bien. « I think I must go up and see it. I could not bring myself to see Irving attempt to young a part as Romeo, but Benedict is another thing altogether, and I think he might be good in it: while Miss Terry is sure to be a delightful Beatrice » Carroll assistera à une représentation de la pièce quelques semaines plus tard, le 8 novembre 1882, ainsi que nous l'apprennent les Lewis Carroll Diaries. Enthousiasmé par la production et ses interprètes - il entretenait d ailleurs une correspondance plus qu'amicale avec Ellen Terry, interprète du rôle de Béatrice - Carroll assista à six représentations de Much ado about nothing. Elle Terry (1847-1928) « est restée la plus célèbre personnalité d une famille de comédiens qui se poursuit au XXe siècle avec le grand John Gielgud. Elle est également célèbre en raison d une hypothèse, dépourvue de tout fondement objectif mais sans cesse rappelée par les divers biographes ou commentateurs de Carroll, selon laquelle il aurait été amoureux d'elle et aurait même demandé sa main. Elle eut, et cela seul est prouvé, trois maris et, de surcroît, un compagnon qui lui donna deux enfants » (cf. L. Carroll, Oeuvres, éd. J. Gattégno, Bibliothèque de la Pléiade, p. 1969). Ellen Terry a brossé dans ses mémoires un charmant et malicieux portrait de ce fou de théâtre qu'était Lewis Carroll : « He was a splendid theatre-goer, and took the keenest interest in all the Lyceum productions, frequently writing to me to point out slips in the dramatic s logic which only he who ever have noticed! He did not even spare Shakespeare. I think he wrote these letters for fun, as some people make puzzles, anagrams, or Limericks! » (Cf. Ellen Terry s Memoirs, ed. Edith Craig and Christopher St John, 1933, pp. 12-14.) Document très bien conservé. Références : R. Foulkes, Lewis Carroll and the Victorian Stage, Theatricals in a Quiet Life, Londres, 2005.
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ALICE'S ADVENTURES IN WONDERLAND and THROUGH THE LOOKING-GLASS AND WHAT ALICE FOUND THERE

by DODGSON, Charles L (LEWIS CARROLL)
New York: Limited Editions Club, 1932 & 1935. Hardcover. Very mild sunning to the spine of the Wonderland book. Fine, bright copies in Fine slipcases. Exceptional condition. John Tenniel. Two volumes in original full blue morocco and original full red morocco leather bindings with heavy gilt decorations. Each is copy #509 of 1500 copies with the original John Tenniel illustrations and with typography and binding by Frederick Warde who has SIGNED the first volume. Each copy is additionally SIGNED by Alice Hargreaves, "the original Alice." Only about 500 copies of the first title and about 1000 of the second were signed by her a few years before her death. Alice refused to sign other editions of this famous book in her lifetime, written by Carroll for her when she was young Alice Liddell, but she was convinced with the help of monetary compensation at an advanced age to sign these copies. Many have praised these books, but perhaps novelist Sir Walter Besant's remark on ALICE IN WONDERLAND is the most insightful: "It admits us into a state of being which, until it was written, was not only unexplored but undiscovered." [Attributes: Signed Copy]
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Autograph letter signed.

Autograph letter signed.

by Dodgson, Charles Lutwidge (pseud. Lewis Carroll)., British writer (1832-1898).
Ch[rist]. Ch[urch]. Oxford, 20. XI. 1889. Small-8vo. 2 1/2 pp. Double sheet. Slightly age toned. Charming letter in which Lewis Carroll explains how to operate a music box that he has just gifted to his friend. „My dear Louie, I am very glad the musical box gives you so much pleasure. There is a little Knob which can be moved backwards and forwards when it is in its present position, the box plays the same tune over and over again: and when it is moved into the other position, the box plays its 4 tunes through, and then begins them again, and so on. It will not play them in any other order. If you want to have any tune repeated, you must move the knob, to make it repeat, before finishing the tune. If you wait till the end of the tune and then move it, the box will go on to the next tune. Believe me always yours affectionately. C. L. Dodgson."
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Autograph letter signed.

Autograph letter signed.

by Dodgson, Charles Lutwidge (pseud. Lewis Carroll)., British writer (1832-1898).
Guilford, 29. XI. 1896. Oblong-8vo. 2 pp. To „My dear Minnie" [Milicent Horatia Murdoch] regarding the play "Two Little Vagabonds,": „Two Little Vagabonds" is a capitally acted play, + well worth seeing. I would advise you not to take the children, though: the murders + deaths are too sensational for children. But you should get your husband to take you + Miss Moore. I’m sure you would enjoy it. I’m going to venture to give you a hint (being an old friend) that you might do a real kindness to my niece Menella Dodgson (always called ,Nella’) who is very near you, if you would take notice of her, + perhaps ask her to yur house, + thus brighten a little the rather dull-life of a school-teacher. She is teaching at a school kept by Mrs. Buchnell, [ ] Shis is about 19 : + I don’t think you would find her at all disagreable. [ ]"
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[Alice's Adventures in Wonderland. Through the Looking-Glass and What Alice Found There] Alisa v strane chudes. Skvoz' zerkalo i chto tam uvidela Alisa.

[Alice's Adventures in Wonderland. Through the Looking-Glass and What Alice Found There] Alisa v strane chudes. Skvoz' zerkalo i chto tam uvidela Alisa.

by Carroll Lewis
Izdatel'stvo literatury na inostrannykh iazykakh, 1967.

Translation and foreword by N. Demurova.

Translation of verses by S. Marshak and D. Orlovskaya.

Signed and inscribed by the translator: "L'vu Abramovichu Kassiliu / s blagodarnostiu za schastlivye / chasy "Konduita" i "Shvambranii" / i s samymi serdechnymi / pozhelaniiami / N. Demurova / 10 ianvaria 1970 goda" [To Lev Abramovich Kassil with gratitude for happy hours with The Black Book and Scрwambrania and with the warmest wishes. N. Demurova. January 10th, 1970].

First publication of classical Russian translation by N. Demurova. First Russian edition of both novels in one book.

Lewis Carroll's works, Alice's Adventures in Wonderland and Through the Looking-Glass and What Alice Found, were almost unknown to Russian readers until 1967, despite having been published in Russian several times.

The story of how this edition came about is quite amusing. A Bulgarian publishing house issued an edition of Carroll's novels in 1965, which caught the attention of Soviet authorities in the International Book Organization, who then ordered a translation of the novels... from Bulgarian into Russian, as they believed it to be a Bulgarian story. The translator, Nina Demurova (1930-2021), said in an interview: "I am very grateful to the director of the Bulgarian publishing house, Angel Stoyanov, for finding a way to circumvent the obtuse Soviet system. It was he who consulted his Soviet colleagues and finally suggested that I translate the book. After the publication, I had to collect my fee at the central bank in Sofia, and the director could not understand why I was getting Bulgarian levs for translating an English book into Russian."

This version of Demurova's translation was intended for children. Later, Demurova revised her translation for an academic series called Literary Land- marks.

This book was signed by Nina Demurova to the prominent writer of juvenile and young adult literature Lev Kassil (1905-1970). Demurova mentioned Kassil's bestsellers and autobiographical novels for young people dealing with student life before the Revolution - Konduit (1929; tr. as The Black Book) and Shvambraniya (1931; tr. as The Land of Shvambrania.

Petar Chuklev (b. 1936), a Bulgarian artist, is best known for his illustra- tions in the Bulgarian edition of The Hobbit (1975).

Offered by Biblionne
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ALICE IN WONDERLAND.

by CARROLL, LEWIS.
1930. Hardcover Dust Jacket Included Illustratedw with 6 original colored lithographs by Marie Laurencin 4to Original printed wrappers, glassine dust wrapper slightly torn, in publisher's box The Black Sun Press, Paris 1930 One of 350 numbered copies for the United States, printed on Rives paper Minkoff A-39 Fine [Attributes: Hard Cover]
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NOTES BY AN OXFORD CHIEL

NOTES BY AN OXFORD CHIEL

by [CARROLL, Lewis] DODGSON, Charles Lutwidge
Oxford: James Parker and Co, 1874. First collected edition. Publisher's green cloth titled in gilt to the upper cover. Issued with the collective title page and contents leaf. Author's presentation copy, inscribed on the front pastedown, "H. A. Barclay with the Author's sincere regards Ap. 27 1875". Two later notes of provenance are written on the free endpaper. All edges gilt. A near fine copy, with a little wear to the spine ends, else clean and bright. A rare collection of Dodgson's famous 'Oxford Squibs', good natured satires, usually of a local political nature disguised in the sort of 'nonsense' writing popularised in the author's fiction writings. The first section, The New Method of Evaluation as Applied to , for instance is not part of Dodgson's noted work on number theory, but a comment on religion within the Oxford University with such reasoning as, "let H=High Church, and L=Low Church, then the geometric mean = HL: call this 'B' (Broad Church). . . HL=B2" The other parts comprise, The Dynamics of a Particle; Facts, Figures, and Fancies; The New Belfry, of Christ Church Oxford; The Vision of the Three T's; The Black Cheque, A Fable. The pamphlets were published individually between 1865 and 1874 and collected here for the first time. Presentation copies are rare with only two others offered at auction in the last forty years. The recipient of this copy, the Reverend Henry Alexander Barclay, was a life-long friend of Dodgson's, having been at Christ Church with him, and Dodgson would often visit him in Brighton during the summer. [Attributes: First Edition; Signed Copy; Hard Cover]
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Alice's Adventures in Wonderland [and] Through The Looking-Glass.

Alice's Adventures in Wonderland [and] Through The Looking-Glass.

by CARROLL, Lewis.
London: Macmillan and Co., Limited,, 1898. Curiouser and curiouser! A finely bound copy, comprising the ninth edition, second impression ("eighty-seventh thousand") of Alice's Adventures in Wonderland, and the fourth edition, second impression ("sixty-second thousand") of Through the Looking-Glass. Both volumes are, therefore, from the last editions revised by Carroll and present the author's final version of the texts. 2 volumes in 1, octavo. Finely bound by the Chelsea Bindery in red morocco, spine lettered and decorated with pictorial centre tools in gilt, raised bands, single gilt rule to covers, onlay of Alice to front cover, roll to turn-ins gilt, dark green endpapers, gilt edges. The occasional minor blemish, an excellent copy.
Offered by Peter Harrington
£4,500.00
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Autograph Letter Signed

Autograph Letter Signed

by Carroll, Lewis
1890. ("C.L. Dodgson"), in purple ink on bifold leaf, 4 pages, 3 1/2" x 5 1/2", Christ Church, Oxford, November 2, 1890. Fine fresh example. To Elizabeth Wordsworth**: Carroll apologizes for having caused her to explain in some detail "Your Rules". He then goes on at great length to try and arrange for his niece Edith Alice Dodgson to attend a concert of The Oxford Musical Union on November 11th*. *Dodgson was not feeling well, suffering from "ague, cystitis and lumbago (back pain). See "Diaries" entries for October 31 & December 6, 1890. **Dame Elizabeth Wordsworth (1840-1932), was the great-niece of the poet William Wordsworth. Founder in 1878 of Lady Margaret Hall, Oxford as a college for female undergraduates. In 1886 she also founded St. Hugh's College as a college for poor female undergraduates. She was a prolific author, writing poetry, plays, biographies and religious articles. She was the most important leader of women's education in the nineteenth century and a legend in her own time. Not in Cohen: The Letters of Lewis Carroll. [Attributes: Signed Copy]
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An elementary treatise on determinants, with their application to simultaneous linear equations and algebraical geometry.

by DODGSON, Charles (Lewis Carroll)
London: Macmillan, 1867. FIRST EDITION. Contemporary (publisher's?) cloth, author and title in gilt on spine, head and foot a bit worn. Overall a wonderful copy from the libraries of John S[turgeon] Mackay (1843-1914), Scottish mathematics teacher who was first president of the Edinburgh Mathematical Society and J. Steele of the Coldstream Guards, the oldest continuing regular service regiment in the British army, with their separate book labels on the front paste-down. LEWIS CARROLL'S ONLY TEXTBOOK DODGSON, Charles L. An elementary treatise on determinants with their application to simultaneous linear equations and algebraical geometry. London: Macmillan, 1867. 4to. Contemporary (publisher's?) cloth. Overall a wonderful copy from the libraries of John S[turgeon] Mackay (1843-1914), Scottish mathematics teacher who was first president of the Edinburgh Mathematical Society and J. Steele of the Coldstream Guards, the oldest continuing regular service regiment in the British army, with their separate book labels on the front paste-down. First edition of Dodgson's only full mathematics textbook, which presents his ingenious method for computing the determinant of a square matrix, greatly simplifying what was until then a tedious process of multiple computations. $ 5500.00.
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Symbolic logic. Part I: elementary

Symbolic logic. Part I: elementary

by [CARROLL, Lewis] DODGSON, Charles Lutwidge
London & New York: Macmillan and Co., 1896. FIRST EDITION, PRE-PUBLICATION PRESENTATION COPY. Original publisher's cloth over boards, cut flush, front cover lettered and ruled in black; presentation inscription, "G.E. Jelf, with the Author's sincere regards. Feb. 22, 1896." Preserved in a red morocco-backed slipcase and chemise. First edition of Carroll's early work of logic, the first issue with the introduction dated January 1896. Intended to supply "for a most interesting mental recreation," this work anticipates his later Game of logic (1897), and introduces his inventive use of square Venn diagrams to represent original syllogisms.
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The Nursery 'Alice'

The Nursery 'Alice'

by CARROLL, Lewis (Charles Lutwidge Dodgson)
London: Macmillan, 1890. Nursery version of the classic story conceived to be read and 'cooed over' by younger readers. The two additional 'puzzle-pictures' or sketches that complement this copy are rare and precious examples of a game Carroll used to play with children - the object being to guess the animal before Carroll had finished drawing it. Presentation copy of the first published edition - inscribed by Lewis Carroll on the half title - with two original ink puzzle-pictures by Lewis Carroll tipped in. Quarto, bound in original pictorial boards, preserved in a deep blue, folding, cloth box, 257 mm x 200 mm., 75 pages, colour frontispiece and 3 full-page colour illustrations, numerous illustrations throughout; water damage affecting pages at front and end, endpapers browned and corners worn, otherwise a very good copy.
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Through the Looking-Glass, and What Alice Found There; Rhyme? And Reason?; A Tangled Tale; Alice's Adventures Under Ground [etc.]

Through the Looking-Glass, and What Alice Found There; Rhyme? And Reason?; A Tangled Tale; Alice's Adventures Under Ground [etc.]

by CARROLL, Lewis [Charles L. Dodgson]
Macmillan, London, 1886. Octavo, 4 volumes. "Through the Looking-Glass" is the stated "tenth thousand," but the other volumes are first printings. A handsome set, uniformly bound by Riviere and Son in full rich blue polished calf, with all edges gilt, tilt edges and borders, elaborate spine compartments, reddish-brown morocco spine labels, marbled andpapers, and the original cloth bound in at rear in all four volumes. A very near fine set, with the spines gently and evenly faded to lighter blue, but with gilt still vibrant. A few leaves trivially bumped at the bottom edge of "Through the Looking-Glass;" entirely forgiveable. A most pleasing set. [Attributes: First Edition; Hard Cover]
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Autograph Letter Signed

Autograph Letter Signed

by CARROLL, Lewis (A Ten Year Friendship With a Young Girl)
1892. ("C.L. Dodgson"), in black ink on blue one penny letter card, Christ Church, Oxford, June 3, 1892, with 13 Canterbury Road (in Carroll's hand on the verso). 6 1/4" x 5". 1 page. Fine fresh example. To Winifred Stevens: "My dear Winnie: Have you ever seen the Vernon Gallery, & the rest of the South Kensington Museum? If not, it will fit in with our plans on Wed. very nicely. Please let me know, that I may arrange with my cousin where to meet. Please bring some of your music to Guildford - and songs too, if you sing. . . The Key of the portmanteau is in that inner pocket." Winifred Stevens [later Lady Hawke] (1872-1958), had a friendship with Carroll that lasted over ten years. See Cohen, Letters, p. 679. This letter is not published there; but see the subsequent letter of June 4, 1892 to Winnie's mother, Mrs. H.N. Stevens, Cohen, pp. 906-07. On Wednesday June 8, Dodgson and Winifred went up to London, visited the So. Kensington Museum, saw Henry Irving and Ellen Terry in Lord Lytton¿s "Richelieu," and then went down to Guildford for two nights (Diaries pp 401-02). Carroll was age 50 at the time, Winnie was 20. [Attributes: Signed Copy]
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Alice's Adventures in Wonderland [with] Through the Looking-Glass

Alice's Adventures in Wonderland [with] Through the Looking-Glass

by Carroll, Lewis
New York: The Limited Editions Club, 1932, 1935. Signed Limited Edition. Two volumes. First editions thus, limited to only 1500 numbered copies and published for the members of the Limited Editions Club of New York. Both books signed in ink by "The Original Alice" in Wonderland, Alice Hargreaves (née Liddell); Reportedly only about 1,000 copies of this title were signed by her, a few years before her death. With original illustrations by John Tenniel re-engraved by Frederic Warde and Bruno Rollitz; the first volume is signed at the rear limitation page by Warde. Bound in publisher's original red and blue (respectively) full leather heavily decorated in gilt, with all edges gilt; in publisher's original blue and red cloth slipcases. Near Fine with light rubbing to leather at spine ends and light fading to spine. In Very Good spotted, toned and edge-worn slipcases. A beautiful set. Near Fine. [Attributes: Signed Copy]
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