Don Juan Volume I (1828) Lord Byron – Early Edition – Finden Frontispiece
Early 1828 edition of Don Juan, Volume I only, by Lord Byron, with Finden frontispiece and provenance inscription for Rev. William Delabene Marsden.
Features
- Early 19th-century edition (1828)
- Volume I only of two-volume set
- Illustrated frontispiece by E. Finden after R. Westall
- Provenance: Rev. William Delabene Marsden
- Original quarter-paper and cloth binding
- Compact pocket-sized format
Bibliographic Details
- Title: Don Juan (Volume I only)
- Author: Lord Byron (George Gordon Byron)
- Publication Year: 1828 (MDCCCXXVIII)
- Publisher/Printer: Thomas Davison, Whitefriars, London
- Edition Status: Early collected edition; not the first edition of the work
- Format: Small 12mo
- Pagination: 343 pages
- Illustration: Engraved frontispiece by E. Finden after R. Westall
- Language: English
About the Book
Don Juan is one of Byron’s greatest poetic achievements – bold, comic, satirical, and unfinished at his death in 1824. Issued originally in parts between 1819-1824, this 1828 volume represents an early posthumous collected edition, printed only four years after Byron’s death.
This example contains Volume I only. It embodies the close contemporary reading culture around Byron and the early dissemination of his controversial poem.
About the Author – Lord Byron (1788–1824)
Major Romantic poet known for narrative verse, satire, and tumultuous life; central figure of Romanticism.
About the Illustrator & Engraver
- R. Westall – respected painter and illustrator of literary subjects, frequent collaborator on Byron works
- E. Finden – leading steel-engraver of the period, renowned for literary portrait frontispieces
Their pairing is bibliographically significant and sought after by collectors of illustrated Byron editions.
Provenance – Rev. William Delabene Marsden
Inscription on front free endpaper:
“William Delabene Marsden”
Research indicates:
- Born 1812
- Died 1866 in Louth, Lincolnshire
- Clergyman; recorded as curate in census records
- Will proved 7 September 1866 in Lincoln
- Executors included Emily Sophia Marsden (widow) and Frederick Septimus Tate (surgeon)
This constitutes documented clerical provenance, enhancing research value and interest.
Exterior Condition
- Original quarter binding
- brown paper over boards
- green cloth to spine and inner edges
- Printed label to spine (rubbed, with tears)
- Board-textblock connection weak – almost disbound
- Spine still holding boards together
- Light rubbing and fading
- Bumping to corners
- General handling wear consistent with age
Interior Condition
- Frontispiece loose but present
- Pages tanned, roughly cut / uneven edges
- Repeated reading evident
- Partial tears at inner margins on some pages (not affecting text)
- Small edge tears occasional
- Large crack to gutter at:
- pastedown area
- near title page
- Several further light gutter cracks
- pp. 325–343 partially loose at top inner margin but attached
- No missing pages
- Historic inscription present
- Text remains clean and legible
Physical Details
- Approx. 15.2 × 10.2 × 2.3 cm
- Weight approx. 230 g
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