On a Chinese Screen -
William Somerset Maugham
1922 - William Heinemann, London - First English Edition
First edition of Maugham’s collection of sketches on China.
Maugham spent the winter months of 1919 travelling fifteen hundred miles up the Yangtze river, with what are clearly long stops in Shanghai and Hong Kong amongst other treaty ports. Always more interested in people than places, he noted down acute and finely crafted sketches of those he met on countless scraps of paper.
In the resulting collection we encounter Western missionaries, army officers and company managers who are culturally out of their depth in the immensity of the Chinese civilisation. Maugham keenly observes, and gently ridicules, their dogged and oblivious persistence with the life they know. In total 58 sketches. One of only 2,000 copies published by Heinemann, London, on 9th November 1922. Printed from stereotype plates made from the American type, with a re-set title page also set in America. 2,000 copies were published in New York on 5th October 1922.
Provenance: Owner’s name of J. M. Mathers dated 7th May, 1923 in pencil to front free endpaper. Small Dymock’s bookseller label to front pastedown.
Reference: Stott, A Bibliography of the Works of W. Somerset Maugham, A28b. Penguin Vintage Editions.
Octavo (book size 20.7x16.2cm) pp. viii [2] 11-237 [3]. In publisher’s smooth black cloth, front panel and spine lettered in gilt, front panel blocked in gilt with author’s symbol and design of three flying horses (Stott calls them ‘flying foxes’), spine with design of a flowering tree containing eight birds, rear panel blocked in blind with publisher’s windmill symbol, top edges trimmed, others untrimmed. Condition: Fine but for the usual offsetting to endpapers, in near fine dust jacket with toning to outer edges and spine. Ref: 112180 Price: HK$ 15,000
Maugham spent the winter months of 1919 travelling fifteen hundred miles up the Yangtze river, with what are clearly long stops in Shanghai and Hong Kong amongst other treaty ports. Always more interested in people than places, he noted down acute and finely crafted sketches of those he met on countless scraps of paper.
In the resulting collection we encounter Western missionaries, army officers and company managers who are culturally out of their depth in the immensity of the Chinese civilisation. Maugham keenly observes, and gently ridicules, their dogged and oblivious persistence with the life they know. In total 58 sketches. One of only 2,000 copies published by Heinemann, London, on 9th November 1922. Printed from stereotype plates made from the American type, with a re-set title page also set in America. 2,000 copies were published in New York on 5th October 1922.
Provenance: Owner’s name of J. M. Mathers dated 7th May, 1923 in pencil to front free endpaper. Small Dymock’s bookseller label to front pastedown.
Reference: Stott, A Bibliography of the Works of W. Somerset Maugham, A28b. Penguin Vintage Editions.
Octavo (book size 20.7x16.2cm) pp. viii [2] 11-237 [3]. In publisher’s smooth black cloth, front panel and spine lettered in gilt, front panel blocked in gilt with author’s symbol and design of three flying horses (Stott calls them ‘flying foxes’), spine with design of a flowering tree containing eight birds, rear panel blocked in blind with publisher’s windmill symbol, top edges trimmed, others untrimmed. Condition: Fine but for the usual offsetting to endpapers, in near fine dust jacket with toning to outer edges and spine. Ref: 112180 Price: HK$ 15,000