Marlborough: His Life and Times, Volume V, The Years of Mastery, 1705-1708
by Winston S. Churchill
- Used
- Hardcover
- first
- Condition
- See description
- Seller
-
San Diego, California, United States
Payment Methods Accepted
About This Item
New York: Charles Scribner's Sons, 1937. First edition, only printing. Hardcover. This is the fifth and penultimate volume of Churchill's Marlborough: His Life and Times, the U.S. first edition in the uniform issue blue and gold dust jacket. The British first edition was issued in four volumes. The U.S. publisher chose to split the first two volumes into two books each, resulting in a six-volume set that is otherwise identical in content to the British. Only when the sixth and final volume was published in 1938 were all six U.S. first editions offered in uniform blue and gold dust jackets.
This is a near fine copy in a good plus dust jacket. Alone among the six U.S. first edition volumes, Volume V was bound in a slightly different cloth that proved highly susceptible to spine toning, even when jacketed. This copy is a marvelous exception, not only square, clean, and tight with sharp corners, but also strikingly clean and bright, with perfect, unfaded green hue and vivid spine gilt. We note only the slightest shelf wear to extremities. The contents are clean with only mild age-toning. Spotting is entirely confined to the top edge of the text block, the untrimmed fore edge and the bottom edge both clean. The sole previous ownership mark is a tiny Boston bookshop sticker affixed to the lower left front free endpaper recto. The dust jacket is unclipped, retaining the original upper front flap $2.75 price. The blue and gold hues remain bright, though the jacket shows overall scuffing, light soiling, and shallow losses to extremities. The dust jacket is protected beneath a clear, removable, archival cover.
Marlborough was initially conceived a full 40 years before publication of the final volume. Churchill originally considered the idea of the biography in 1898, returning to it in earnest in 1928. Marlborough ultimately took 10 years of research and writing and is the most substantial published work of Churchill's "wilderness years" in the 1930s, which he spent politically isolated, often at odds with both his own party and prevailing public sentiment. This decade saw Churchill pass into his sixties with his own future as uncertain as that of his nation. It is perhaps not incidental that Churchills great work of the 1930s was about a great ancestor. Churchill may have wondered more than once if the life history he was writing might ultimately eclipse his own. Richard Langworth says "To understand the Churchill of the Second World War, the majestic blending of his commanding English with historical precedent, one has to read Marlborough.
Few would accuse Churchill of objectivity. Nonetheless, as a work of history it drew high praise. Upon reading the proofs, James Lewis Garvin, editor of The Observer, wrote I think it to be the greatest of all your works Your full brush has never had more mastery over space and colour Two months after Volume I was published, on 12 December 1933, T.E. Lawrence wrote to Churchill: I finished it only yesterday. I wish I had not The skeleton of the book is so good. Its parts balance and the main stream flows Marlborough has the big scene-painting, the informed pictures of men, the sober comment on political method, the humour, irony and understanding of your normal writing: but beyond that it shows more discipline and strength: and great dignity. It is history, solemn and decorative. When Churchill was awarded the Nobel Prize in Literature in 1953, it was partly for mastery of historical and biographical description on the strength of Marlborough, which was specifically cited and quoted by the Swedish Academy.
This final volume of Marlborough was published almost exactly one year before the outbreak of the Second World War and Churchills return to the Cabinet to reprise his First World War role as First Lord of the Admiralty. Twenty months after the final volume was published Churchill became wartime prime minister.
Reference: Cohen A97.4(V).b, Woods/ICS A40(ba), Langworth p.169
This is a near fine copy in a good plus dust jacket. Alone among the six U.S. first edition volumes, Volume V was bound in a slightly different cloth that proved highly susceptible to spine toning, even when jacketed. This copy is a marvelous exception, not only square, clean, and tight with sharp corners, but also strikingly clean and bright, with perfect, unfaded green hue and vivid spine gilt. We note only the slightest shelf wear to extremities. The contents are clean with only mild age-toning. Spotting is entirely confined to the top edge of the text block, the untrimmed fore edge and the bottom edge both clean. The sole previous ownership mark is a tiny Boston bookshop sticker affixed to the lower left front free endpaper recto. The dust jacket is unclipped, retaining the original upper front flap $2.75 price. The blue and gold hues remain bright, though the jacket shows overall scuffing, light soiling, and shallow losses to extremities. The dust jacket is protected beneath a clear, removable, archival cover.
Marlborough was initially conceived a full 40 years before publication of the final volume. Churchill originally considered the idea of the biography in 1898, returning to it in earnest in 1928. Marlborough ultimately took 10 years of research and writing and is the most substantial published work of Churchill's "wilderness years" in the 1930s, which he spent politically isolated, often at odds with both his own party and prevailing public sentiment. This decade saw Churchill pass into his sixties with his own future as uncertain as that of his nation. It is perhaps not incidental that Churchills great work of the 1930s was about a great ancestor. Churchill may have wondered more than once if the life history he was writing might ultimately eclipse his own. Richard Langworth says "To understand the Churchill of the Second World War, the majestic blending of his commanding English with historical precedent, one has to read Marlborough.
Few would accuse Churchill of objectivity. Nonetheless, as a work of history it drew high praise. Upon reading the proofs, James Lewis Garvin, editor of The Observer, wrote I think it to be the greatest of all your works Your full brush has never had more mastery over space and colour Two months after Volume I was published, on 12 December 1933, T.E. Lawrence wrote to Churchill: I finished it only yesterday. I wish I had not The skeleton of the book is so good. Its parts balance and the main stream flows Marlborough has the big scene-painting, the informed pictures of men, the sober comment on political method, the humour, irony and understanding of your normal writing: but beyond that it shows more discipline and strength: and great dignity. It is history, solemn and decorative. When Churchill was awarded the Nobel Prize in Literature in 1953, it was partly for mastery of historical and biographical description on the strength of Marlborough, which was specifically cited and quoted by the Swedish Academy.
This final volume of Marlborough was published almost exactly one year before the outbreak of the Second World War and Churchills return to the Cabinet to reprise his First World War role as First Lord of the Admiralty. Twenty months after the final volume was published Churchill became wartime prime minister.
Reference: Cohen A97.4(V).b, Woods/ICS A40(ba), Langworth p.169
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Details
- Bookseller
- Churchill Book Collector (US)
- Bookseller's Inventory #
- 006239
- Title
- Marlborough: His Life and Times, Volume V, The Years of Mastery, 1705-1708
- Author
- Winston S. Churchill
- Format/Binding
- Hardcover
- Book Condition
- Used
- Quantity Available
- 1
- Edition
- First edition, only printing
- Publisher
- Charles Scribner's Sons
- Place of Publication
- New York
- Date Published
- 1937
- Note
- May be a multi-volume set and require additional postage.
Terms of Sale
Churchill Book Collector
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About the Seller
Churchill Book Collector
Biblio member since 2010
San Diego, California
About Churchill Book Collector
We buy and sell books by and about Sir Winston Churchill. If you seek a Churchill edition you do not find in our current online inventory, please contact us; we might be able to find it for you. We are always happy to help fellow collectors answer questions about the many editions of Churchill's many works.
Glossary
Some terminology that may be used in this description includes:
- Shelf Wear
- Shelf wear (shelfwear) describes damage caused over time to a book by placing and removing a book from a shelf. This damage is...
- Jacket
- Sometimes used as another term for dust jacket, a protective and often decorative wrapper, usually made of paper which wraps...
- Fine
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- Spine
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- Cloth
- "Cloth-bound" generally refers to a hardcover book with cloth covering the outside of the book covers. The cloth is stretched...
- Text Block
- Most simply the inside pages of a book. More precisely, the block of paper formed by the cut and stacked pages of a book....
- Recto
- The page on the right side of a book, with the term Verso used to describe the page on the left side.
- Fore Edge
- The portion of a book that is opposite the spine. That part of a book which faces the wall when shelved in a traditional...
- Gilt
- The decorative application of gold or gold coloring to a portion of a book on the spine, edges of the text block, or an inlay in...
- First Edition
- In book collecting, the first edition is the earliest published form of a book. A book may have more than one first edition in...
- Tight
- Used to mean that the binding of a book has not been overly loosened by frequent use.