Verlag: PhiladelphiaPrinted by T. & G. Palmer for J. Conrad & Co et al. ., 1804
Anbieter: Robert Frew Ltd. ABA ILAB, London, Vereinigtes Königreich
12mo. (15 x 10 cm). pp.231. Contemporary calf sometime rebacked with mismatching boards, spine ruled in blind and with red morocco label lettered in gilt. With a neat presentation to f.f.e.p. reading: "Miss Martha Dana Farrar - from her Grand Father. December 25th, 1842", and an additional old ownership inscription of James M. Dorsey to title-page. Contents toned and and somewhat soiled (mainly the 20 pages). Peter Baylet (bap. 1778, d. 1823) first published Poems, London, 1803, a collection which reflects a profound and early admiration of Wordsworth and Coleridge's Lyrical Ballads; unwilling to be publicly associated with those writers, however (Francis Jeffrey had just commenced his attacks on the 'Lake school'), Bayley presented an imitation of Wordsworth's 'Idiot Boy' as a burlesque. Wordsworth and Coleridge responded by assisting Robert Southey in writing a ferocious review of the volume for the Annual Review. Bayley had written other poetry, but this review, along with financial security on his father's death, subdued his literary ambitions (ONDB). A scarce volume.
First American edition. 15.5 cm. 231pp., [1]. Full flame leather. Gilt stamped red leather spine label and gilt rules. Bookplate of George Hale Nutting who served as President of Sons of the Revolution, on front pastedown. American Imprints 5824. "In 1803 he published Poems, a collection which reflects a profound and early admiration of Wordsworth and Coleridge's Lyrical Ballads; unwilling to be publicly associated with those writers, however (Francis Jeffrey had just commenced his attacks on the âLake school'), Bayley presented an imitation of Wordsworth's 'Idiot Boy' as a burlesque. Wordsworth and Coleridge responded by assisting Robert Southey in writing a ferocious review of the volume for the Annual Review. Bayley had written other poetry, but this review, along with financial security on his father's death, subdued his literary ambitions." - David Chandler. ODNB.