First UK edition, first printing. Original blue cloth lettered in gilt to the spine, in dustwrapper. A very good copy, the binding square and firm, the extremities a little rubbed and the spine slightly faded. The contents, with offsetting to the endpapers, spotting to the prelims and closed text block edge and a previous owner's name to the half title, are otherwise clean throughout. Complete with the lightly rubbed and nicked dustwrapper that has a few short closed tears and heavy toning to the panel edges and spine. Not price clipped (10s 6d to the front flap, although the price has been crossed out and re-priced in pen.
When, in 1949 W. H. Auden was chosen to deliver the annual series of Page-Barbour lectures at the University of Virginia, he responded with the lectures published two years later as 'The Enchafèd Flood'. Collectively concerned with the literary iconography and symbolism of the sea, the three lectures take as their starting point the dream of desert and sea in the fifth book of Wordsworth's Prelude, and conclude with Melville's 'Moby Dick', taking in (among others) Coleridge, Baudelaire, Dante, Tennyson along the way. "The present book [...] is much larger in scope than anything Mr. Auden has done [in criticism] before, and presents his mature conclusions on many of the central themes he has been discussing in shorter pieces for the past ten years" (Monroe K. Spears, 'Poetry', August, 1950). Published on 26 January 1951 in an edition of 3430 copies, the UK edition followed the US edition published the previous March. (Bloomfield and Mendelson A31b).
Stock code: 25654
£30