Lot 72
Lord DUNSANY [2 signed books] & 2 ALS from Lady Dunsany

Estimate: $400 - $600

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About this Lot
Description
Lord DUNSANY [Two signed books & two related autograph letters from Lady Dunsany]

Edward Plunkett, Lord DUNSANY (1878-1957).

Tales of War. Boston: Little, Brown, & Co., 1918. Octavo. Original cloth (spine faded and bumped [see images]. Provenance: James B. Pond jr (bookplate). First edition, signed by the author on front free endpaper.

[with:]

Five Plays. Boston: Little, Brown, & Co., 1918. Octavo. Original cloth (spine bumped and slightly chipped at the head and foot [see images]. Provenance: James B. Pond jr (bookplate). Association copy, signed by the author on front free endpaper.

[and:]

Lord DUNSANY’s first tour of the US. - Beatrice, Lady DUNSANY (1880-1970). Two als, to ‘Mr. Pond’ [of the Pond Lecture Bureau, New York City], the first dated ‘July 1. [19]19’ from Dunstall Priory, 2pp., octavo, inviting Pond for lunch in the country “you could then discuss the question of the lectures with my husband & probably come to some arrangement”; the second dated ‘Nov. 9. [19]19’ from Hillside Farm, Wyoming, New York, 1p. of an octavo bi-folium, written during Dunsnay’s lecture tour, asking for $50 ‘as I think I shall want some more American money to get to Chicago &, as you know, we don’t want to change English money & lose on the exchange?’.

James B. ‘Bim’ Pond jr (1889- 1961) was a second generation tour manager In that he took over the business founded by his father – see the James B. Pond papers (1863 – c.1940s) in the Clement Library.

Two signed books and 2 letters recalling the relationship between Lord Dunsany and his US promoter, and the arrangements for his 1919 tour. he tour was a sell-out success.

"It is hard now to convey just how popular Dunsany was in the decade centering around 1919-1920. Mencken considered it a coup to get his stories for THE SMART SET and to be the one to introduce him to the American public. New York theaters fought over the right to put on his newest play. Film studios in Germany, England, and America tried to negotiate contracts to make movies out of his plays or to have him write scripts for them. F. Scott Fitzgerald includes a scene in his first novel where his young hero goes through a 'Dunsany period' at college (immediately after his PORTRAIT OF DORIAN GRAY stage), when he and a friend take turns reading Dunsany's poetry back and forth to each other.  Ernest Hemingway took his tales along with him on a camping trip and read them aloud to his friends at night around the campfire; in typical laconic fashion, Hemingway contributes the briefest evaluation of Dunsany on records ("He's great").  James Thurber starred in a college production of A NIGHT AT AN INN which was apparently a great success. When J. B. Pond lured Dunsany over on a lecture tour from October 1919 through January 1920 he was feted and lionized, ranked with top authors of the day like Spanish novelist Blasco Ibanez (THE FOUR HORSEMEN OF THE APOCALYPSE) and recent Nobel Prize winner Maurice Maeterlinck (THE BLUE BIRD). Between engagements he spent his time socializing with the Maeterlincks and ex-President Roosevelt's family, and meeting Kahlil Gibran (THE PROPHET), Mencken, and, as he casually remarks on one occasion, "all the poets in America." Everywhere he was deluged by reporters, who wanted his opinions on every topic imaginable. His lectures were packed; they were so successful that Pond made plans for him to tour the West as well as the East. At a lecture in Boston he so impressed one writer in the audience, H. P. Lovecraft, that Lovecraft devoted the next seven years to writing imitation Dunsany. On all sides Dunsany was treated as one of the greatest living writers, by public and intelligentsia alike.
   On the one hand he reveled in it, and on the other it made him uneasy . . . " (https://sacnoths.blogspot.com/2015/08/dunsany-praised.html)