Milne, A.A. (1882-1956). Winnie-The-Pooh. Ernest H. Shepard, decorations. London: Methuen & Co. Ltd, 1926.
8vo. Numerous illustrations by Shepard. Original pictorial green cloth gilt, top edge gilt, others uncut; dust jacket (light soiling to spine panel).
FIRST TRADE EDITION of Milne's beloved classic. In the FIRST ISSUE DUST JACKET, with the "117th Thousand" advertisement for When We Were Very Young on rear flap and the "7/6 Net" price on spine panel.
Milne began the poems in When We Were Very Young for his son, Christopher Robin. They had originally appeared in Punch magazine and, to the shock of Milne and Methuen, the book sold out on publication day. It was an unqualified success, quoted, recited, and parodied everywhere. Milne based the stories of his second major book Winnie-the-Pooh on a set of stuffed animals Christopher Robin (called "Billy Moon" in the family) owned. Methuen published Milne's third children's book just two months after Winnie-the-Pooh. The House at Pooh Corner would be the last of the Pooh books. Milne wanted both to stop while the books were selling well—"I have had my thrill out of children's books, and know that I shall never recapture it"—and to protect his growing son: "I feel that the legal Christopher Robin has already had more publicity than I want for him. Moreover, since he is growing up, he will soon feel that he has had more publicity than he wants for himself. We all, young and old, hope to make some sort of name, but we want to make it in our own chosen way, and, if possible, by our own exertions" (Thwaite, pp.338-39). Grolier, One Hundred Books Famous in Children's Literature 71. A BRIGHT COPY.
This lot is located in Chicago.