D.H. Lawrence (1885-1930) Autograph manuscripts and corrected typescripts of Studies in Classic American Literature , [1917-1922] c.519 page in total, various sizes, chiefly 210 x 175mm and 280 x 220mm. Laid in 10 yellow silk-covered folding cases, morocco labels, within two half morocco folding boxes gilt by James Brockman, Oxford. Provenance : Sotheby's, 19 July 1990, lot 176.The genesis of Studies of Classic American Literature (1923), D.H. Lawrence’s pioneering piece of literary criticism reviewing the great eighteenth- and nineteenth-century American writers: over 500 autograph manuscript and typescript pages. Comprising: Box I i) Autograph manuscripts, with emendations, of five of the essays in the books: i) ‘Dana’, 22 pages, paginated 2-7, 9-23; ii) ‘Herman Melville (1)’ [Typee and Omoo], 14 pages; iii) ‘Herman Melville (2)’ [Moby Dick], 26 pages; iv) ‘Nathaniel Hawthorne (II)’ [Blithedale Romance], 9 pages of manuscript (paginated 1-9) and 5 pages corrected galley proof (paginated 10-13); v) ‘Whitman’, 20 pages ii) Autograph manuscript signed, ‘Foreword to Studies in Classic American Literature’, dated Florence 1920 at the end, with emendations and cancellations and deletions, 6 pages; [and :] Corrected typescript of the same, incorporating the changes made in the manuscript, with a few autograph corrections and one annotation, 6 pages iii) Carbon typescript of ‘Whitman’, 8 pages Box II iv) Autograph manuscript and corrected typescript of the final version of Studies in Classic American Literature , published in 1923. 164 pages, paginated in autograph, 86 pages entirely in autograph, much of the remaining typescript bearing extensive autograph emendations: i) ‘Foreword’ (pages 1-2); ii) ‘The Spirit of Place’ (3-10); iii) ‘Benjamin Franklin’ (11-23); iv) ‘Henry St. John de Crevecoeur’ (24-36); v) ‘Fenimore Cooper's White Novels’ (37-47, of which 42-47 are autograph); iv) ‘Fenimore Cooper's Leatherstocking Novels’ (48-60, entirely autograph); iv) ‘Edgar Allan Poe’ (61-79, 72a, of which 61-69 are autograph, no pages 76-78 but text complete); viii) ‘Nathaniel Hawthorne and The Scarlet Letter’ (80-93, entirely autograph); ix) ‘Nathaniel Hawthorne's Blithedale Romance’ (94-102, entirely autograph); x) ‘Dana's Two Years Before the Mast’ (103-124, of which 103-104 and 108-111 entirely autograph); xi) ‘Herman Melville's Typee and Omoo’ (125-137, entirely autograph); xii) ‘Herman Melville's Moby Dick’ (138-156, of which 138-139, 142-143 and 155-166 are entirely autograph); xiii) ‘Whitman’ (157-166, entirely autograph) v) Complete carbon typescript of Studies in Classic American Literature , including ‘The Two Principles’, which did not appear in the 1923 volume, with a few minor corrections. 239 pages: i) ‘Foreword’ (paginated 1-2), a different version from the two above; ii) ‘The Spirit of Place’ (3-19, 5a, 14a); iii) ‘Benjamin Franklin’ (20-35); iv) ‘Henry St. John de Crevecoeur’ (33 [sic]-52, lacks page 49 with gap in text); v) ‘Fenimore Cooper's Anglo-American Novels’ (53-69); vi) ‘Fenimore Cooper's Leatherstocking Novels’ (70-90); vii) ‘Edgar Allan Poe’ (1-18); viii) ‘Nathaniel Hawthorne’ (1-17); ix) ‘Nathaniel Hawthorne's Blithedale Romance’ (1-12); x) ‘The Two Principles’ (1-17); xi) ‘Dana's Two Years Before the Mast’ (1-24); xii) ‘Herman Melville's Typee and Omoo’ (1-12, [2]a); xiii) ‘Herman Melville's Moby Dick’ (1-22); xiv) ‘Whitman’ (1-17, 2a, 8a-e, no page 9) In January 1917, Lawrence wrote to his agent proposing a trip to America, where he intended to write a series of essays on American literature. His request for a passport was denied, for a second time, so he began work in Cornwall instead. By 1918 he was back in the Midlands, at Middleton by Wirksworth, writing in a cottage paid for by his sister, Ada: Lawrence and Frieda had been expelled from Cornwall as the military authorities objected to a suspect writer and an enemy alien living near shipping lanes where German submarines were inflicting heavy losses on Allied ships, which only confirmed a sense of alienation from his country. That same year, the English Review published the first versions of what became Studies of Classic American Literature [only ‘Whitman’, of the five essays listed above in i, was published in periodical form prior to the 1923 book]; the ‘Foreword to Studies in Classic American Literature’ [see ii above] is not the version eventually published in the book in 1923, rather it was published a few years earlier, in the New Republic, on 15 December 1920, as ‘America, Listen to Your Own’. For several years Lawrence continued to make drastic revisions of his book; after the Lawrences emigrated to America in 1922, they spent their first winter at the Del Monte ranch on Lobo Mountain, where Lawrence managed a final reworking of the much revised Studies , shortening and Americanizing the studies in accordance with his new experience. A ‘second’ version of the book[here in a carbon typescript, v above] was completed in 1920 and published in 1964 as The Symbolic Meaning . This version differs radically both from the early autograph [i above] and the final version [iv, above] published in 1923. See lot 125 for Lawrence's annotated copy of The Scarlet Letter used in the preparation for this work.