Dickens, Charles (1812-1870). A Christmas Carol. In Prose. Being a Ghost Story of Christmas. London: [Bradbury and Evans for] Chapman & Hall, 1843.
8vo. Half-title printed in blue, title-page printed in red and blue with verso printed in blue, hand-colored steel-engraved frontispiece and 3 hand-colored steel-engraved plates by John Leech (a few heightened in gum arabic), 4 wood-engravings in the text by W.J. Linton after Leech; 2pp. publisher's advertisements at end; new tissue-guards tipped in. (Very occasional and light spotting to a few leaves.) Original brick-red fine-ribbed cloth, covers with decorative blind border surrounding central gilt cartouche and lettering on upper, spine lettered and decorated in gilt, all edges gilt, green coated endpapers (spine a bit darkened and with a slight lean, a few tiny ink stains on lower cover). Provenance: J. Andrews, London (contemporary booksellers' ticket); Jacob Bromley (bookplate).
FIRST EDITION, TODD'S FIRST IMPRESSION, with "Stave I" as the first chapter heading, balance of text uncorrected, red and blue title-page dated 1843, and green endpapers. The binding has the first state "D" of Dickens unbroken, and the closest interval between the blind decorative border on the left and the left extremity of the gilt cartouche measuring 14-15mm. This copy has the unbroken "C" in the signature on p.17, which "probably indicates the earliest printing of the text" (Smith, note 3, p.26). "The greatest Christmas book from the pen of any man... it was a pronounced success and from a literary aspect it has delighted millions of readers. It may readily be called the Bible of Christmas and the Authors its Apostle" (Eckle, p.110). Issued about 10 days before Christmas of 1843, A Christmas Carol sold 6,000 copies on the first day, with 24 editions in the original format and numerous reprintings, though the profits did not meet Dickens' expectations. Eckel, pp.110-115; Smith II:4; Gimbel A79.
This lot is located in Chicago.