Paradise Lost

Los 111
05.02.2026 10:00UTC +00:00
Classic
AuctioneerCHRISTIE'S
VeranstaltungsortVereinigtes Königreich, London
Aufgeldsee on Website%
ID 1540359
Los 111 | Paradise Lost
Schätzwert
$ 10 000 – 15 000
MILTON, John (1608-1674). Paradise Lost in Ten Books. London: Printed by S. Simmons to be sold by T. Helder, 1669.

First edition, finely bound, of “one of the greatest works of the human imagination” (ODNB). Amory's fourth issue. Milton is still unsurpassed as the greatest writer of English epic. The poem declares up front its aim to "justify the ways of God to man," but explores themes both universal and personal—with Satan's fascism, the surreal eroticism of the angels and the unknowable world of God, and Milton’s engagement with the science of his time continuing to captivate readers centuries later. Milton, who visited Galileo in Italy in 1638, was the first author to use the word "space" in our modern sense "outer space" and his cosmic epic takes place in an assuredly Copernican universe.

This copy was apparently a wedding gift from Sir John Stirling Maxwell, later a founding member of the National Trust for Scotland, to Margot Tennant, daughter of wealthy industrial chemist Sir Charles. His inscription is dated 9 May 1894, the day before her marriage to Herbert Asquith, future Prime Minister. An extrovert with a razor-sharp wit (she once quietly told actress Jean Harlow, who had mispronounced "Margot," that "the "t" is silent, as in "Harlow"), Margot later became a political liability by "hysterically opposing women's suffrage, attacking the suffragettes as 'wombless, vicious, cruel women'" (Colin Clifford). In 1939, signing herself as "Margot Oxford" (since she was Countess of Oxford and Asquith), she presented this copy to Ray Atherton, Chief of the European Division of the State Department during WWII (who happened to be the man on duty when the Nazis delivered their actual Declaration of War). Margot lobbied hard with FDR to have Atherton appointed Ambassador to the Court of St. James, but to no avail.

This copy is Amory's 4*, with Z and Vv in the corrected state, with "illustrious" and "far" respectively. Hugh Amory, "Things Unattempted Yet: A bibliography of the first edition of Paradise lost," in: The Book Collector, Spring 1983, pp. 41-66; Pforzheimer 718 (as the "sixth title (Lowndes' eighth)"; Wing M2143 (sixth title).

Quarto (178 x 125mm). (Repaired tear at gutter of title just reaching the "P" in Paradise; intermittent spotting, faint tidemarks, more pronounced in second half.) Burgundy crushed morocco gilt by Leighton Brewer, all edges gilt (rebacked with spine laid down, rear board slightly bowed, faintly rubbed). Provenance: J. Newcomb (ownership inscription to title page) – Margot Tennant, Countess of Oxford and Asquith, 1864-1945 (gift inscription dated 9 May 1894 from Sir John Stirling-Maxwell, 10th Baronet, 1866-1956; gift inscription to:) – Ray Atherton, 1883-1960.
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