Verkäufer
Raptis Rare Books, Palm Beach, FL, USA
Verkäuferbewertung 5 von 5 Sternen
AbeBooks-Verkäufer seit 24. September 2003
Autograph letter signed by Evelyn Waugh. Quarto, one page on Hotel Ritz, Mexico letterhead, the letter reads, "Sept 14th Dear Mr. Jones, Very many thanks for your letter which has just reached me here. I am so glad you found Scoop funny. Letters like yours are very encouraging. I am out here trying to study Mexican conditions, but finding it very hard to concentrate while things in Europe look so grave. Perhaps my next book will have to be about life in the army. Yours sincerely Evelyn Waugh." The recipient, Richard Arnold-Jones, was a young man who had recently been awarded the 1938 Duke of Devonshire Prize Competition (offered by the British Empire League). Arnold-Jones went on to become a prominent Anglo-Catholic, poet, teacher and co- founder of the Redrice School. Waughâ s readers would have to wait until 1952 for the first of his three books â about life in the armyâ , but it is interesting to note the germ of an idea was there before the war started and before he had joined up. On his conversion to Catholicism, Waugh had accepted that he would be unable to remarry while Evelyn Gardner was alive. He wanted a wife and children, however, and in October 1933, he began proceedings for the annulment. A delay in the submission of the papers to Rome meant that the annulment was not granted until July 4th 1936. In the meantime, following their initial encounter in Portofino, Waugh had fallen in love with Laura Herbert. He proposed marriage, by letter, in the spring of 1936. There were initial misgivings from the Herberts, an aristocratic Catholic family; as a further complication, Laura Herbert was a cousin of Evelyn Gardner. Despite some family hostility the marriage took place on 17 April 1937 in London. Scoop was published in May 1938 to wide critical acclaim. In August 1938 Waugh, with Laura, made a three-month trip to Mexico after which he wrote Robbery Under Law, based on his experiences there. In the book he spelled out clearly his conservative credo; he later described the book as dealing "little with travel and much with political questions.â In very good condition. Evelyn Waugh (1903â "1966) was a British novelist, journalist, and satirist known for his sharp wit, incisive social commentary, and masterful prose. Emerging as a leading literary figure in the interwar period, Waugh gained recognition with Decline and Fall (1928) and Vile Bodies (1930), which satirized the decadence of Englandâ s upper class. His later works, including Brideshead Revisited (1945) and the Sword of Honour trilogy (1952â "1961), reflect deeper themes of faith, tradition, and the decline of aristocratic society. A devout Catholic convert, Waugh infused his writing with religious and moral concerns, particularly in his exploration of grace and redemption. His stylistic precision, dark humor, and critique of modernity cement his place as one of the most significant English novelists of the 20th century. Bestandsnummer des Verkäufers 149224
Titel: Evelyn Waugh Autograph Letter Signed.
Signiert: Signatur des Verfassers
Auflage: 1. Auflage
Anbieter: Raptis Rare Books, Palm Beach, FL, USA
Autograph letter signed by Evelyn Waugh declining a speaking engagement. Octavo, one page on Easton Court Hotel letterhead. The letter reads in full, "Oct. 15th Dear Sir, My thanks for your letter of yesterday. I notice that the promise given to any writer's books in your exhibition depends on his publisher's arrangements of their stall,.of whether he makes a speech or not; also that the special publicity devoted to the speakers has to be divided among thirty four. It seems to me that in the circumstances only someone fanatically devoted to public speaking could reasonably be expected to accept. I dislike it very much and only attempt it for charity or clear personal gain. I hope the exhibition is a great success & that your thirty four orators have their audience spell bound - but please excuse me from competing with them. Yours thankfully, Evelyn Waugh." In fine condition. Evelyn Waugh (1903â"1966) was a British novelist, journalist, and satirist known for his sharp wit, incisive social commentary, and masterful prose. Emerging as a leading literary figure in the interwar period, Waugh gained recognition with Decline and Fall (1928) and Vile Bodies (1930), which satirized the decadence of Englandâs upper class. His later works, including Brideshead Revisited (1945) and the Sword of Honour trilogy (1952â"1961), reflect deeper themes of faith, tradition, and the decline of aristocratic society. A devout Catholic convert, Waugh infused his writing with religious and moral concerns, particularly in his exploration of grace and redemption. His stylistic precision, dark humor, and critique of modernity cement his place as one of the most significant English novelists of the 20th century. Artikel-Nr. 148505
Anzahl: 1 verfügbar
Anbieter: Michael Treloar Booksellers ANZAAB/ILAB, Adelaide, SA, Australien
Zustand: Fine. Small quarto (204 × 152 mm), 1 page on the letterhead of 'Combe Florey House, Combe Florey, nr Taunton' (printed in red on blue paper). One horizontal crease where folded for posting, otherwise in fine condition. The letter reads in full: '20th October 63 | Dear Maro | What a very nice thought and what a delicious present. I must not call it "Turkish Delight" as I used in the nursery - "Greek Delight". It is very seldom that the genuine article appears in England. My wife in particular relishes it and sends her thanks. It was a great pleasure to have met John. I wish we could have done more for him. My kindest regards to Constantine. Yours very sincerely | Evelyn Waugh'. Maro Stathatos (née Vatimbella) was an Egyptian-born Greek artist. Her son, the poet and photographer John Stathatos, would later write a short account of his visit to Waugh's house at Combe Florey as a sixteen-year-old, referred to in this letter. '[T]he family connection went back twenty-two years, to 1941 and wartime Egypt. Between February and July of that year, Waugh found himself posted to Egypt with No.8 Commando with the rank of Captain. Except for an unsuccessful raid on Bardia in April and the famous five days on Crete with "Creforce", he was based throughout that period at army camps near Alexandria, first at Sidi Bish and later at Mersa Matruh. Along with many of the Allied officers in Cairo and Alexandria, Waugh was entertained by members of Egypt's cosmopolitan, multicultural Sephardic, Coptic and Greek communities, including the family of my maternal grandfather, Nicholas Vatimbella, and my mother Maro, then a young painter . The receipt of one of Waugh's magisterial snubs could reasonably be regarded by the recipient as one of life's more devastating but memorable experiences, rather like finding oneself in the path of a stampeding rogue elephant, and it was an experience I was not to be spared that bank-holiday weekend' ('"I Am Short, Elderly and Corpulent:" A Visit to Combe Florey in 1963' in 'Evelyn Waugh Studies', Volume 52, Number 2, Autumn 2021). The short article is well worth reading in full. Artikel-Nr. 137561
Anzahl: 1 verfügbar
Anbieter: Rooke Books PBFA, Bath, Vereinigtes Königreich
Loose Pages, Articles. Zustand: Near Fine. None (illustrator). An autographed signed letter from Evelyn Waugh to artist Eileen Mayo, a charming letter in which he references his godson, Jonathan Guinness. An autographed signed letter from Evelyn Waugh to Eileen Mayo, in the original envelope.Envelope is postmarked the 30th March 1936, addressed to 'Miss Eileen Mayo, 8 Eton Road, London N.W.3'.Letter reads as, 'Dear Miss Mayo, thank you so much for your letter. I love your picture - but alas I am not allowing myself the luxury of keeping it. I have bought it as a present for my young god-son, Jonathan Guinness. I think it is so important for him to have really good + unaffected pictures round him. Yours sincerely, Evelyn Waugh'.Dame Eileen Mayo was an artist and designer who worked in many mediums, including tapestry, woodcuts, lithographs, and silk screening. She studied at the Slade School, and designed a platypus stamp for Australia, and six stamps of moths and fish for New Zealand.The godson Waugh refers to in this letter is Jonathan Bryan Guinness, the 3rd Baron Moyne, who was born in 1930. He was the son of Bryan Guinness and Diana Mitford; this letter was written just seven months before Diana married Oswald Mosley. Waugh had been infatuated with Diana, dedicating his novel 'Vile Bodies' to her, and claiming that her beauty "ran through the room like a peal of bells". The pair were fast friends, moving in the same literary circles, with Waugh living with the Guinnessess for extending periods in 1929 and 1930; however, there was a rupture in their friendship in 1930, with the pair becoming more distant and meeting infrequently. Waugh was likewise a good friend of Nancy.Letter is written on letter headed paper from the Queen Hotel, Chester. The Chester Queen Hotel opened in 1860, and also saw Charles Dickens and Cecil Rhodes among its guests. A single leaf, folded horizontally in the centre. Handwritten to one side, the leaf is very bright with only a couple of very small mark. The envelope is opened to the head, with some light handling marks and spots, as expected to see. Near Fine. signed by author. book. Artikel-Nr. 896P18
Anzahl: 1 verfügbar