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Pleiades Club Year Book
New York: Pleiades Club, 1912
(April)
First limited edition, #365, suede binding
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Atkinson
# B1
Sanborn
and Clark # 1
NOTES:
Contains "Free." O'Neill's first appearance in a book. Signed presentation to
Robert Sisk laid in.
INSCRIPTION: [On Casa Genotta stationary]
Dear Bob: This for your Pleiades book with that so buyutiful poem of mine in it -- / Again, with all friendship! / Gene / Dec. 34
The Pleiades Club was composed of actors, artists, and
writers who met in Greenwich Village in the interest of "Bohemian good
fellowship." G. Warren Landon, a member of the club, arranged to have O'Neill's poem
"Free" published in the club's yearbook. O'Neill was introduced to Landon by his
brother Jamie, and it is probably more than a coincidence that Landon also wrote the words
to the club's drinking song. Limited to 500 copies, the yearbook was distributed mainly
among the members of the club.
Robert Sisk was the publicity agent for the Theatre Guild. Sisk and his wife Cepha became
close friends with Eugene and Carlotta O'Neill. O'Neill's sarcastic reference to his
"buyutiful poem" is consistent with his feelings expressed elsewhere about his
poetry. He once wrote a friend who asked to republish some of his verse, "It would be
a shame to waste good type on such nonsense. If those small-town jingles of my
well-misspent youth were amusingly bad, I would have no objection, for their republication
might hand someone a laugh, at least. But they're not. They are merely very dull
stuff." |