By the Candelabra's Glare
First edition | |
Author | L. Frank Baum |
---|---|
Illustrator | N. Guy Chilberg, Charles J. Costello, W. W. Denslow, et al. |
Cover artist | Charles J. Costello |
Language | English |
Genre | Poetry |
Publisher | Privately printed |
Publication date | 1898 |
Publication place | United States |
Media type | Print (Hardcover) |
Pages | 89 pp. |
By the Candelabra's Glare is a 1898 collection of poems written by L. Frank Baum. One of his earliest works, the book was significant in Baum's evolution from amateur to professional author.
The book
Baum's first book, Mother Goose in Prose, had been published in 1897 by the Chicago firm Way and Williams. The book was attractively produced, with illustrations by a young Maxfield Parrish; but its relatively high price for a children's book limited its commercial success.[1] Publisher Way and Williams went bankrupt in 1898. For his second book, Baum reverted to his earlier amateur mode. Baum had had his own printing press as a youth, and had created a family newspaper;[2] in 1898 he obtained another small printing press and some cases of type, and personally printed and bound 99 copies of a collection of his verse. Baum's sons took over the press when he was done with it.[3]
Help from friends
Baum had lived in Chicago since 1891, and was intimate with a circle of the city's journalists and newspaper artists. Through his trade journal The Show Window, he knew publishers too. He solicited a coterie of friends to help him with his vanity project: he "relied on friends in the publishing trade to provide the paper, zinc etchings, inks, all other materials, including the illustrations."[4] Eight local artists supplied pictures for the book. The eight were:
- Ralph Fletcher Seymour, who would hand-letter Baum's Father Goose: His Book the following year;
- Charles Jerome Costello, who would help Seymour with the Father Goose lettering, and who would hand-letter Baum's The Army Alphabet and The Navy Alphabet in 1900;
- Thomas Mitchell Pierce, a son-in-law of Baum's sister Harriet Alvena Baum Neal who would illustrate Baum's Daughters of Destiny in 1906;
- N. Guy Chilberg [Wikidata];
- Frank Hazenplug;
- Charles M. Tuttle;
- Gwynne C. Price, the only woman among the eight;
- and most significantly, W. W. Denslow, who would illustrate three more Baum books in three years — Father Goose (1899), The Wonderful Wizard of Oz (1900), and Dot and Tot of Merryland (1901).
Baum dedicated the book to friend (and future creditor) Harrison H. Rountree, a businessman and brother-in-law of Chauncey L. Williams (the Williams in Way and Williams, Baum's first book publisher). Rountree would control the rights to The Wonderful Wizard of Oz and other Baum books for two decades (1911–32), after Baum went bankrupt.[5]
The verse
The 41 poems in the Candelabra collection include sentimental and humorous verses that Baum had composed over the preceding years, some of which had been printed in newspapers, including Baum's own South Dakota paper, The Aberdeen Pioneer. One of the poems is "La Reine est Mort – Vive La Reine," a humorous look at early feminists.
- And shout hurrah for the woman new!
- With her necktie, shirt and toothpick shoe,
- With tailor-made suit and mien severe
- She's here!
Another poem, "Two Women," provides a more serious view of the same subject, in a contrast between "woman Old" and "woman New." A poem from the South Dakota years, "Nance Adkins," has a farm wife as its heroine.[6]
Aftermath
Though By the Candelabra's Glare was a privately printed vanity project, it led to Baum's first literary and commercial breakthrough. The final section of the book featured nine Baum poems for children; Baum decided to expand this into a new collection. The result was his and Denslow's Father Goose, a major and pathbreaking success of 1899 that launched Baum's literary career. (Two poems appear in both books.)
Copies of the original edition of By the Candelabra's Glare are "now extremely rare and much sought by collectors."[7] The book was published again in facsimile in 1981, with an introduction by Baum scholar Peter Hanff.[8]
References
- ^ Katharine M. Rogers, L. Frank Baum, Creator of Oz: A Biography, New York, St. Martin's Press, 2002; p. 62.
- ^ Rogers, pp. 4-5.
- ^ Rogers, p. 58.
- ^ Michael Patrick Hearn, "The Hatching of Father Goose," The Baum Bugle, Vol. 43 No. 3 (Winter 1999), pp. 45-55; see p. 45.
- ^ Rogers, pp. 65, 116, 163, 175. Baum's widow Maud Gage Baum regained the rights in 1932.
- ^ Rogers, p. 65.
- ^ Martin Gardner, The Night is Large: Collected Essays, 1938–1995, New York, Macmillan, 1997; p. 331.
- ^ L. Frank Baum, By the Candelabra's Glare, Introduction by Peter E. Hanff; Delmar, NY, Scholars' Facsimiles and Reprints, 1981.
External links
- complete text of By the Candelabra's Glare at the Wayback Machine (archived October 10, 2006)
- v
- t
- e
- The Magical Monarch of Mo
- The Wonderful Wizard of Oz
- Dot and Tot of Merryland
- The Master Key
- The Life and Adventures of Santa Claus
- The Enchanted Island of Yew
- The Marvelous Land of Oz
- Queen Zixi of Ix
- The Fate of a Crown
- The Woggle-Bug Book
- Annabel
- Aunt Jane's Nieces
- Aunt Jane's Nieces Abroad
- Daughters of Destiny
- Sam Steele's Adventures on Land and Sea
- The Twinkle Tales
- John Dough and the Cherub
- Ozma of Oz
- Policeman Bluejay
- The Last Egyptian
- Dorothy and the Wizard in Oz
- Aunt Jane's Nieces at Millville
- Aunt Jane's Nieces at Work
- The Road to Oz
- Aunt Jane's Nieces in Society
- The Emerald City of Oz
- Aunt Jane's Nieces and Uncle John
- The Daring Twins
- The Flying Girl
- The Sea Fairies
- Aunt Jane's Nieces on Vacation
- Phoebe Daring
- Sky Island
- Aunt Jane's Nieces on the Ranch
- The Patchwork Girl of Oz
- Aunt Jane's Nieces Out West
- Tik-Tok of Oz
- Aunt Jane's Nieces in the Red Cross
- The Scarecrow of Oz
- Mary Louise
- Rinkitink in Oz
- The Lost Princess of Oz
- The Tin Woodman of Oz
- The Magic of Oz
- Glinda of Oz
collections
collections
- By the Candelabra's Glare
- Father Goose: His Book
- The Maid of Arran
- The Wizard of Oz (1902)
- Prince Silverwings
- The Woggle-Bug
- The Tik-Tok Man of Oz
- The Fairylogue and Radio-Plays
- The Patchwork Girl of Oz (1914)
- The Magic Cloak of Oz
- His Majesty, the Scarecrow of Oz
- Violet's Dreams
- The Gray Nun of Belgium
and collaborators
- Maud Gage Baum (wife)
- Matilda Joslyn Gage (mother-in-law)
- Frank Joslyn Baum (son)
- Harry Neal Baum (son)
- Roger S. Baum (great-grandson)
- Jocelyn Burdick (niece)
- Paul Tietjens
- Edith Ogden Harrison
- Isidore Witmark
- Louis F. Gottschalk
- Nathaniel D. Mann
- Frederic Chapin
- Manuel Klein
- Arthur Pryor
- Byron Gay
- Emerson Hough
- William Wallace Denslow
- John R. Neill
- The Dreamer of Oz: The L. Frank Baum Story (1990 film)