605

Dylan Thomas

Currency:USD Category:Collectibles / Autographs Start Price:NA Estimated At:2,000.00 - 3,000.00 USD
Dylan Thomas

Bidding Over

The auction is over for this lot.
The auctioneer wasn't accepting online bids for this lot.

Contact the auctioneer for information on the auction results.

Search for other lots to bid on...
Auction Date:2018 Aug 08 @ 18:00 (UTC-5 : EST/CDT)
Location:236 Commercial St., Suite 100, Boston, Massachusetts, 02109, United States
ALS - Autograph Letter Signed
ANS - Autograph Note Signed
AQS - Autograph Quotation Signed
AMQS - Autograph Musical Quotation Signed
DS - Document Signed
FDC - First Day Cover
Inscribed - “Personalized”
ISP - Inscribed Signed Photograph
LS - Letter Signed
SP - Signed Photograph
TLS - Typed Letter Signed
Splendid ALS, three pages, 5.25 x 7, January 6, 1953. Written from the "Boat House" in Laugharne, a letter to British author and editor Ernest Franklin Bozman, in part: "Thank you for your last letter of the 2nd of January, in which you mentioned the possibility of an autobiography, especially in relation to my early years. Well, of course, I have produced a more-or-less autobiography in my ‘Portrait of the Artist as a Young Dog.’ And I really haven’t enough desire, or material, to try to write another, And the childhood broadcast you mentioned—I’m afraid I don’t know which one it was—is one of only six similar broadcasts: not nearly enough for even the smallest book. These six were, incidentally: Two on Memories of Christmas, one of Memories of August Bank Holiday, one called just Memories of Childhood & the other Early One Morning and the other, in dramatic radio form, called Return to Swansea. I have also a recent short story, about the adolescent period, called The Followers. In an American book of mine, published by New Directions, called ‘The World I Breathe’—a book of verse and prose—there are five stories which haven’t appeared in an English book: 2 of them haven’t appeared in any periodical. These five are: The Holy Six, A Prospect of the Sea, The Burning Baby, Prologue to an Adventure, The School for Witches, and are all very young & violent and romantic. There are also, in periodicals, 4 stories of a similar kind: The Lemon, The Horse’s Ha, The Vest, The True Story. I think that the broadcast reminiscences, all fairly rigorously innocent, together with the death—& blood other group typified by the Burning Baby, could make an interesting volume: especially if somehow through a longish introduction, through an introductory story, or through some as–yet–unthought of prose—…I could explain their origins & bring them closer together. If you would be interested in this, I could have the five stories from ‘The World I Breathe’ typed out, write to a friend on the BBC to gather together the reminiscent broadcast, of which, unfortunately, I have no copy, and ask John Alexander Rolph, my bibliographist–to–be, to find the four stories in the old, fled periodicals. Perhaps we could discuss this on the 20th or 21st?” Thomas adds a lengthy postscript: “This wd, I realize, be a hotchpotch of a book, but the separate items cd be introduced, in some way, so as to make them cohere into a kind of oblique autobiography: a growing–up told (a) in stories written while growing up, and (b) in memories of childhood written when grown up.” In fine condition, with a few light stains, and staple holes to the upper left corners.

For the final four years of his tragically short life, Thomas lived at the Boathouse in Laugharne, working and writing in the upper shed with its inspiring views of four estuaries. This wonderful letter, which boasts a surplus of Thomas titles both famous and unfamiliar, was written to editor Ernest Franklin Bozman of J. D. Dent and Sons, a company that published several Thomas books "of verse and prose," including Twenty-Five Poems from 1936, Deaths and Entrances from 1946, and the referenced Portrait of the Artist as a Young Dog in 1940. Thomas would pass just ten months later on November 9, 1953.