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Virginia Woolf Rare letter to her American publishers
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拍品名称:
Virginia Woolf Rare letter to her American publishers
拍品描述:
Virginia Woolf
Typed letter signed ("Virginia Woolf") to Messers George H. Doran & Co., providing biographical publicity information for the American publication ofThe Voyage Out.
One page (225 x 167 mm) on typewriter paper, written from Hogarth House, Paradise Road, Richmond, Surrey, England, 10 May 1920,signedwith underlining and corrections in ink, stamp with date 24 May 1920 to verso; light toning, fold marks, small area of adhesive residue to upper outer corner of verso. [With:] one leaf of onion skin (225 x 167 mm) bearing a charcoal portrait sketch of Woolf, unsigned; light toning.
An important Woolf letter and a striking contemporary likeness.
In this rare letter to George H. Doran & Co.—her American publisher—Woolf provides concise autobiographical notes for publicity surrounding the publication ofThe Voyage Outin the United States. She places herself firmly within the English literary tradition, noting her parentage (daughter of Sir Leslie Stephen, goddaughter of James Russell Lowell), her marriage to Leonard Woolf, and her contributions to theTimes Literary SupplementandThe Athenaeum.
She outlines her published works to date,The Voyage Out(1915) andNight and Day(1919), as well as shorter pieces such asThe Mark on the WallandKew Gardens, printed by the Hogarth Press. Woolf describes the ethos of the press, remarking that “as a general rule we do all the work of printing ourselves,” and references its early successes, includingStories from the Old Testamentby Logan Pearsall Smith and, most notably, T.S. Eliot’s first book,Poems(1919). She closes by foreshadowing a volume of short stories “not previously published.” This is allegedly the only known letter that Woolf wrote to Doran.
The accompanying portrait, executed in charcoal on onion skin, presents Woolf at a formative moment in her career. Together, they offer an example of Woolf’s literary self-fashioning and her contemporary image, capturing her emergence as one of the central figures of twentieth-century literature.
REFERENCE:
The Uncollected Letters of Virginia Woolf,Stephen Barkway and Stuart N. Clarke, eds (Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press, 2025)
Typed letter signed ("Virginia Woolf") to Messers George H. Doran & Co., providing biographical publicity information for the American publication ofThe Voyage Out.
One page (225 x 167 mm) on typewriter paper, written from Hogarth House, Paradise Road, Richmond, Surrey, England, 10 May 1920,signedwith underlining and corrections in ink, stamp with date 24 May 1920 to verso; light toning, fold marks, small area of adhesive residue to upper outer corner of verso. [With:] one leaf of onion skin (225 x 167 mm) bearing a charcoal portrait sketch of Woolf, unsigned; light toning.
An important Woolf letter and a striking contemporary likeness.
In this rare letter to George H. Doran & Co.—her American publisher—Woolf provides concise autobiographical notes for publicity surrounding the publication ofThe Voyage Outin the United States. She places herself firmly within the English literary tradition, noting her parentage (daughter of Sir Leslie Stephen, goddaughter of James Russell Lowell), her marriage to Leonard Woolf, and her contributions to theTimes Literary SupplementandThe Athenaeum.
She outlines her published works to date,The Voyage Out(1915) andNight and Day(1919), as well as shorter pieces such asThe Mark on the WallandKew Gardens, printed by the Hogarth Press. Woolf describes the ethos of the press, remarking that “as a general rule we do all the work of printing ourselves,” and references its early successes, includingStories from the Old Testamentby Logan Pearsall Smith and, most notably, T.S. Eliot’s first book,Poems(1919). She closes by foreshadowing a volume of short stories “not previously published.” This is allegedly the only known letter that Woolf wrote to Doran.
The accompanying portrait, executed in charcoal on onion skin, presents Woolf at a formative moment in her career. Together, they offer an example of Woolf’s literary self-fashioning and her contemporary image, capturing her emergence as one of the central figures of twentieth-century literature.
REFERENCE:
The Uncollected Letters of Virginia Woolf,Stephen Barkway and Stuart N. Clarke, eds (Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press, 2025)