Sophie Dupré - Literary

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MEYERSTEIN (E.[dward] H.[arry] W.[illiam], 1889-1952, English Writer and Scholar, writer of the life of Thomas Chatterton)

"Cockadoodledont for a Little Girl" the doggerel by E. H. W. Meyerstein and the Pictures by Peggy Norgate, inscribed and dated on the front free endpaper "Helen Muir from the writer, April 1941. This for a little girl of four - and, with it, what exceeds all price, A little piece of safe advice: WHEN YOU WANT MORE, CRY OUT FOR MORE.", 8vo., Cecil Palmer, London, slightly foxed throughout

Item Date:  1941
Stock No:  31053      £150

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MEYERSTEIN (E.[dward] H.[arry] W.[illiam], 1889-1952, English Writer and Scholar, writer of the life of Thomas Chatterton)

"In Time of War", Poems with an inscription in capital letters, "The Book of Helen and of David Muir, and may its Lure in time Ensure they both Endure, with Smiles Joy-pure Woes thought past Cure" with the date in a pattern, 1944, 8vo., The Richards Press, London,

Item Date:  1942
Stock No:  31052      £75

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MEYERSTEIN-41835-1.jpg ORIGINAL POEM BY MEYERSTEIN
MEYERSTEIN (E.[dward] H.[arry] W.[illiam], 1889-1952, English Writer and Scholar, writer of the life of Thomas Chatterton)

Autograph Letter Signed to ‘Dear President’, Austin LANE POOLE (1889-1963, Historian, from 1913 Tutor, then Fellow at St John's College, Oxford, President, 1947-1957) saying that he was “shocked and grieved to hear of Miss Lane Poole’s death, and I condole with you on your loss. There are some people of whom one does not think as departing this life, and she was one of them. During the War years I enjoyed her gracious hospitality in Walton Street, and I shall miss her (I know this) when next I attend a Sunday service in Magdalen Chapel. The following lines and this translation, occurred to me quite spontaneously, and I send them as a token of my real regret on a great loss to classical scholarship...” there follows a poem in Latin and. the translation “What her mind knew it gave, and what / It did not know within upgrew / Till it blazed forth with grace most due / Much wept she went; without a spot / Now bides she in a learned plot / A hope, a rose that shines anew!...”, 1 side 4to., 3 Gray’s Inn Place, 29th March 1947

Item Date:  1951
Stock No:  41835      £150

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MEYERSTEIN-39545-1.jpg
MEYERSTEIN (E.[dward] H.[arry] W.[illiam], 1889-1952, English Writer and Scholar, writer of the life of Thomas Chatterton)

Autograph Letter Signed with initials to Barbara Muir thanking her for her letter and the "New Yorkers ... I have been here a month and though I can't say I like hospital I have been able to read and correct the paged proofs of my novel which went back to Victor Gollancz on Wednesday ... luckily a friend, R. L. Watson was with me when I had the stroke ... he came here in the ambulance with me. I suppose even if one does not drink or lead a wanton life, either with a wife or a mistress, there is a price to be paid for intellectual concentration and certainly I seem to be paying it ...", I side lettercard with autograph address on the verso, Whittington Hospital, 12th July

Item Date:  1951
Stock No:  39545      £75

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MEYERSTEIN (E.[dward] H.[arry] W.[illiam], 1889-1952, English Writer and Scholar, writer of the life of Thomas Chatterton)

Pair of Typed Letters Signed with autograph corrections to Percy and Barbara Muir the first thanking them for their hospitality and saying that he is "sure you did everything you could and of course it is interesting to me, as a comparatively unknown man, to watch big business at close quarters, and when I saw you waving your last contract (Barbara) before the astonished visitors and you (Percy) greeting the miracle play with that dignified absence of comment that I have learnt to associate with Oxford & Cambridge intelligentsia I saw exactly how things would be. Well, one has to live, and as long as one lives for oneself one must, I suppose, try to combine the bray of the poet and the song of the rentier ... One may have money at the bank and yet die of starvation. That is the lesson of 1947. Don't think me bitter. I have to talk like this, for I have no happiness except in lonely creative struggles (which are not all beer and skittles - though thank God there are no wife and brats clamouring for the results of work that pays ... Casual ruthlessness combined with absence of mind are grand assets for the battle of life, but some of us lack them .. It will be long before I forget standing on the Takeley road outside your gate in the night air, invited to listen to 'our nightingales' ...", 1 side A4, together with a "copy of my reply" to Edward answering what was evidently some argument with a fellow guest over the Miracle play and his contract "I 'm sorry the sight of my contract upset you. I hadn't realised that there was anything indecent about a contract as such ...I am sincerely sorry that you have no happiness except in 'lonely creative struggles' ... Well, there it is! We have both liked having you to stay here and enjoyed our talks. And I, for my part, very much enjoyed hearing you read your work - on this last visit your Miracle Play. But is seems you have had less enjoyment ...", 1 side A4 and finally he writes to Barbara that he is "glad I wrote so ingenuously to you since my letter has provoked so ingenuous a reply. I am glad that you can say 'We both liked having you to stay here', and I hope I am a little wiser than I was after trying with however little success, to co-operate in your arduous duties as hostess ... Your children (especially Helen) grow more like you every day ...", 1 side oblong 8vo., 3 Gray's Inn Place, W.C., 28th and 29th May

Item Date:  1947
Stock No:  39544      £125

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