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Sir Ernest Henry Shackleton (1874-1922)

細節
Sir Ernest Henry Shackleton (1874-1922)

The Heart of the Antarctic being the story of the British Antarctic Expedition 1907-1909 by E.H. Shackleton... with an introduction by Hugh Robert Mill... an account of the first journey to the Magnetic South Pole by Professor T.W. Edgeworth David. London: Ballantyne & Co. Limited for William Heinemann, 1909. 2 volumes, 4° (24.5 x 18cm.). Half-titles. Titles in brown and black. Plates (a few double-page, 12 coloured after George Marston), 1 folding panorama and 3 folding lithographic maps printed in three colours in pocket at back of vol.II, illustrations. Original blue cloth, upper covers blocked and lettered in silver, spines lettered in gilt, top edge gilt (some fading, spines bumped at head and foot, lower joint of vol.II detached).

PROVENANCE:
Sir Ernest Henry Shackleton (1874-1922), and thence by descent.

FIRST EDITION OF 'THE BEST BOOK OF POLAR TRAVEL THAT HAS EVER BEEN WRITTEN' (Manchester Guardian, 17 November 1909) WITH AN IMPORTANT PROVENANCE.

'At the end of March [1909], when Shackleton had reached New Zealand from the Antarctic, he knew only too well that the book of the expedition would have to be written in a rush... To meet his deadline... Shackleton needed an amanuensis. Edward Saunders, a reporter on the Lyttelton Times, at Christchurch, was recommended; by Sir Joseph Ward, the Prime Minister of New Zealand, no less. Shackleton asked Saunders to travel with him to England and work for £10 a week, all expenses, and return passage paid. Saunders jumped at the offer... [He] was not an ordinary ghost writer, however. ...he was a Boswell looking for a Johnson...

If I said that any chapter was simply my transcription of notes taken down from Shackleton's dictation, I should be telling an untruth [Saunders explained later]. If I said that any chapter was entirely mine, I should be telling an untruth. My work was complementary to his. I could say that Shackleton had a remarkable gift of literary suggestion... and that when his interest was stirred at critical portions of his narrative, he had a command of vivid forceful English. Shackleton and I understood each other thoroughly.

As a result, The Heart of the Antarctic... bore none of the tell-tale stiltedness of most ghosted work. The book appeared early in November, an unprecedentedly quick five months after putting pen to paper... Shackleton wanted Saunders' name on the title page, but Saunders refused. The book, as he afterwards said, "should stand without any attempt being made to explain just how [it was] produced"' (R. Huntford, Shackleton, London, 1996, pp.317-319).

Conrad p.148; Renard 1446; Spence 1097 (2)
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This lot will not be subject to VAT either on the hammer price or the buyer's premium.