Monk Gibbon Estate The Brahms Waltz 1970 Signed First Edition Irish Poetry

Binding

Subject

Topic

Special Attributes

Year Printed

Author

Country/Region of Manufacture

Region

Original/Facsimile

Language

Place of Publication

Publisher

You missed us - sold out already! If you’d like us to produce more stock then drop us a line and let us know.

Description

Monk Gibbon Estate The Brahms Waltz 1970 Signed First Edition Irish Poetry  

Monk Gibbon THE BRAHMS WALTZ Autobiography of A Poet in Love Hutchinson, 1970, London. First edition. Hardcover in dust jacket. Jacket design by Craig Dodd. Size: 22 x 14,2 cm. Pp. /2/, 224 with one illustration before title page. There are stains on dust jacket and some minor on the cover pages. Overall, a nice copy. Provenance:  from the estate of the author. This book is inscribed by Gibbon (on a cover page). For condition and details, see scans.

***

William Monk Gibbon (1896 – 29 November 1987) was an Irish poet and prolific author, known as “The Grand Old Man of Irish Letters”. His collection of over twenty volumes of poetry, autobiography, travel and criticism are kept at Queen’s University Belfast. He also wrote many published novels, and has been characterised as “self-regarding and prickly”. He was the son of the Rev. Canon William Monk Gibbon, a Church of Ireland clergyman, and from 1900 vicar of St. Nahi’s Church, Dundrum. His mother, Isabella Agnes Meredith, was a daughter of William Rice Meredith of Dublin, the brother of John Walsingham Cooke Meredith. Monk was a nephew of The Rt. Hon. Richard Edmund Meredith and a first cousin of Carew Arthur Meredith. Monk’s uncle inherited the Gibbon estates of Sleedagh House, County Wexford, and The Parks in Neston, Cheshire, which came to them via the Monk family from who he took his name. He was educated at St. Columba’s College, Dublin and Keble College, Oxford, but after only one term he volunteered for the army, serving as an officer in France during the First World War until invalided out in 1915. He became an avid pacifist after his experiences of war, and left Ireland to teach English in Switzerland. He also taught in England before returning to Ireland, not retiring until he was in his eighties. As a British Officer on leave in Ireland, he was involved in the Easter Rising of 1916. His book Inglorious Soldier gives a first-hand, and one of the most detailed accounts of the shooting of the pacifist Francis Sheehy-Skeffington. His papers present lively and intimate accounts of the famous Irish writers whom he knew personally, such as William Butler Yeats, George Moore (novelist), Edith Anna Somerville and Katharine Tynan. At his father’s church, Lily Yeats, sister of W. B. Yeats, was a parishioner. There was also a family relationship: Gibbon and the Yeats family were cousins. There was no love lost between the poets Gibbon and Yeats, however; and the biography Gibbon wrote was rather hostile. Yeats in return said of Gibbon: “Monk Gibbon is one of the three people in Dublin whom I dislike… Because he is argumentative!” In 1963, Gibbon collaborated in the editing and publication of Michael Farrell’s posthumous novel Thy Tear’s Might Cease. In 1928, he married Mabel Dingwall, daughter of Walter Molyneux Dingwall and Mabel Sophia Spender, a daughter of Edward Spender of Bath, Somerset. Edward Spender was a strong supporter of the Women’s Suffrage movement in which his sister, the novelist Emily Spender played a leading role as a member of the executive committee of the Central Committee of the National Society for Women’s Suffrage. Edward Spender was a cousin of the diarist Henry Crabb Robinson, and a brother-in-law of the novelist Lillian Spender and the liberal politician William Saunders, with whom he founded the Central News Agency (London). Mrs Gibbon’s mother was a first cousin of John Alfred Spender, uncle of the poet Sir Stephen Spender. The Gibbons’ home, Tara Hall, at Sandymount, County Dublin, was a literary centre and afternoon tea parties there often ran into the night. Frequent visitors there included Irish writers such as Padraic Colum, Ulick O’Connor and Austin Clarke. Gibbon always wrote in bed and often wandered down to the sea front in his pyjamas to collect driftwood. He was a keen cyclist all his life and could still be found riding his bicycle around Sandycove in his late eighties. Works: The Tremulous String (1926) Limited Edition 250 hand printed copies; The Branch of Hawthorn Tree (1927); The Seals (1935) autobiography; The Living Torch (1937) poems by AE, editor; Mount Ida (1948); This Insubstantial Pageant (1951); The Masterpiece and the Man: Yeats as I Knew Him (1959) biography; The Climate of Love (1961); Inglorious Soldier (1968) memoir; The Brahms Waltz (1970); The Velvet Bow (1972); The Pupil (1981).      

 

Shipping & Delivery

Payment

Payment processing options:

  • Credit/Debit Card
  • Paypal
  • Bank transfers - SEPA (€), ACH (us$), BACS (£)-
  • Credit/Debit card
  • Cryptocurrencies
  • AliPay
  • WeChat Pay

We kindly ask our buyers to pay within three working days. In case you are having issues with payment, please contact us to let us know.
All invoices are sent electronically, we can also provide physical copies upon request. 

Shipping

Shipping method:
All items are shipped via registered priority airmail. In other words, you will receive a tracking number with whom you can trace the book’s location at any given time. In case you want another carrier like UPS, DHL or other, please notify before payment.

Packaging:
Books - shipped in reinforced cardboard packages and plastic foil to protect the package from moisture damage.
Posters, maps, prints, drawings and similar - strong cardboard tubes.
Everything else - unless otherwise specified, items will be sent in envelopes reinforced on one side with cardboard and foil.

Combined Shipping:
It is possible to combine purchases. Since we don’t charge shipping for books, you don’t need to make request a separate invoice.
Please note: If you have ordered more than one item from a  different category, please wait for the combined shipping invoice.

Shipping time:
We send all items within 24h of received payment received on a working day. In case we are on holidays (state, religious, personal or other) the item will be shipped the first next working day.
Post offices sometimes need up to 48h to process the tracking numberUsually all tracking numbers will be visible by then.

Delivery time:
Please note, delays due to customs office inspections are not included in the estimate.
Europe(incl Russia): 5-20 days.
North America: 15-30 days.
USA: 20-50 days.
South & Central America: 15-45 days.
Australia & Oceania: 20-50 days.
Africa: 15-40 days. 

Customs office:
You may be charged by the customs office in your country. There are no hidden expenses like sales or export taxes unless specified in the item’s description. Please familiarize with the import laws of your country before purchase in case you are not entirely sure if an item subject to customs taxes. For some items an export license is needed and additional fees and time to get the export permit will be clearly stated in the item description.
Some items may end up at customs inspections on departure so we will kindly ask you to be patient while such inspections take place because they can cause a delay in the delivery time.
Also there is a possibility that some item may end at customs inspection in your country. Sometimes it’s a lengthy process, especially for buyers from the US, Italy, France and Brazil.

Returns and refunds

In case you would like to return/exchange the item for any reason you are free to do so. We ask all our buyers to contact us prior to sending an item back. The moment the item arrives back the buyer will be entitled to a refund minus the expenses for shipping and a 15% restocking fee.
Exchange for another item from the store is also an option. It is possible to return an item within 30 days from the date of arrival.

Feel free to contact us if you have any additional questions, we will be happy to answer them!