First edition of a classic

Doughty, Charles Montagu. Travels in Arabia Deserta.

Cambridge, University Press, 1888.

2 vols. 8vo. XX, 623, (1 blank), 31, (1) pp., including publisher's catalogue bound at rear. XIV, 690 pp. With numerous in-text illustrations, folding plates, and a large, cloth-backed folding map in pocket at rear of second volume, titled "North Western Arabia and Negd", printed in colour. Modern full green morocco with red morocco spine labels, titled in gilt.

 4,500.00

First edition of only 500 copies. Doughty's journey, undertaken between 1875 and 1878, "did much to advance knowledge of north-western and central Arabia" (cf. Henze). He was the first European to see the city of Mada'in Salih, near the northern border of Hejaz, crossed the expanse of Arabia to Jeddah, and returned via Bombay. Doughty's "unique style of English, which [he] vehemently refused to have edited", led to four commercial presses turning down his manuscript before the Cambridge University Press agreed to publish it in 1888. "The result was one of the great classics of travel literature which, although exceptionally demanding for the reader, passed through numerous reprintings" (Howgego III, p. 246). The geological and geographical descriptions are of such accuracy and detail that it became a military textbook for the British Army in the final phases of the Arab revolt. In its sensitive observation of Bedouin life it is unsurpassed, whether describing how scarlet dye is made from toadstools and camels' urine or the construction of tent ropes. T. E. Lawrence describes Doughty as coming away with "the soul of the desert".

Condition

Gentle toning in margins. Some folding plates with repaired tears or reinforcements to folds; some quires uncut; a few instances of chipped or torn or edges.

References

Macro 859. Howgego III, D29. Henze II, 88. NYPL Arabia coll. 166. FΓΌck 198.