A glass-fronted Regency bookcase in a corner of the London Library opposite the lift holds a collection of rare and beautiful editions of Edward FitzGerald's poem, Rubáiyát of Omar Khayyám. Since its first publication in 1859, it has appeared in every size and shape, giant and toy, on vellum and silk, in fabulous bindings stamped with peacocks' tails and nightingales' eyes; it has been printed by masters for tiny private presses, handwritten and illustrated by artists - beginning with the trio of William Morris, Burne-Jones and Charles Fairfax Murray, who helped launch the work after some friends came across it in a remainders box outside Quaritch's. Two years had passed since the bookseller first published it, at the price of 1s, and not a single copy, it seems, had been sold.
LRB 9 April 2009 | PDF Download
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