SKU: 99172012854

[WOOLF, Virginia, Charles MAURON ( translator ), et al .] Commerce. Cahiers trimestriels … hiver 1926.

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[WOOLF, Virginia, Charles MAURON ( translator ), et al .] Commerce. Cahiers trimestriels … hiver 1926.A Pre Publication Fragment of To the Lighthouse [WOOLF, Virginia, Charles MAURON (translator), et al.] Commerce. Cahiers trimestriels hiver 1926. Paris: Librairie Henri Leclerc. 1926. 4to. Original brown printed wrappers, uncut; pp. 200, [2 (colophon, blank)]; creasing and minor chipping to spine; old repaired tear to head of front wrapper with small trace of adhesive, a few nicks to edges; very light creasing to a handful of leaves; a very good copy;

A Pre-Publication Fragment of To the Lighthouse

[WOOLF, Virginia, Charles MAURON (translator), et al.] Commerce. Cahiers trimestriels … hiver 1926. Paris: Librairie Henri Leclerc. 1926.

4to. Original brown printed wrappers, uncut; pp. 200, [2 (colophon, blank)]; creasing and minor chipping to spine; old repaired tear to head of front wrapper with small trace of adhesive, a few nicks to edges; very light creasing to a handful of leaves; a very good copy; bookplate of William Beekman to inner front cover.

First edition, no. 1020 of 2,500 copies on Alfa paper from a total edition of 2,900, of the tenth issue of the Parisian literary review Commerce, containing the first published excerpt of Woolf’s To the Lighthouse, predating its publication in book form by five months.

The extract is a French translation ('Le temps passe’) of ‘Time Passes’, the experimental middle portion of To the Lighthouse, completed in draft form in English by the end of May 1926 (pp. 89–133 here). Woolf’s diary makes clear that it was a piece of writing that gave her more than usual trouble. Recording the passage of ten years between the two outer sections of the novel (set pre- and post-war), the central presence is the Ramsays' holiday house on the Isle of Skye (where the events of the outer sections takes place), now empty, with the objects inside the house as ‘minor characters’, all subjected to the passage and erosion effected by time.

The literary critic and aesthetician Charles Mauron, a close friend of Roger Fry, began translating works by Virginia Woolf and E.M. Forster in 1925, at Fry’s suggestion; Mauron had been suggested to Woolf as a translator of ‘Time Passes’ by Forster in October 1926, who, as Woolf writes in a letter to Mauron, ‘so much admires your translation of the Passage to India’. Fry, who had collaborated with Mauron on the translation of A Passage to India, was ‘forced to reconstruct’ his translations of Mallarmé’s poems with Mauron’s help after they were ‘lost in a stolen suitcase in June 1933 […] [Mauron] co-edited them with Julian Bell, for publication after Fry’s death’ (King’s College, Cambridge, Roger Eliot Fry). Mauron would later translate Woolf’s Orlando and Flush into French, as well as works by Katherine Mansfield, D.H. Lawrence, T.E. Lawrence, and Laurence Sterne.

Commerce had been established in 1924 by Marguerite Caetani, Princess of Bassiano, in collaboration with Paul Valéry , Léon-Paul Fargue, and Valery Larbaud (and, initially, Adrienne Monnier), publishing twenty-nine issues between 1924 and 1932. The first issue had featured the first fragments of Joyce’s Ulysses, translated into French and ‘overseen by Adrienne Monnier, who had to resign her position as administrator of the journal in August 1924, due to overwork. Monnier’s exhaustion was not due to Joyce’s demands on her time, but rather to Léon-Paul Fargue’s strange working habits. He claimed he could contribute poems to the review only by dictating them at night, after Adrienne had spent a long and fatiguing day in the bookshop’ (Benstock, Women of the Left Bank (1986), p. 226).

‘It is noteworthy that Woolf’s middle section of To the Lighthouse was issued in a French translation before the original, published in 1927 in Great Britain - partly because Commerce only accepted unpublished literary texts, and partly because of Woolf’s connections: not only had T.S. Eliot, the editor of the Criterion to which Woolf regularly contributed, shared interests with Commerce, but Valery Larbaud, who had discovered James Joyce, played a major role in the diffusion of anglophone literature, including the work of Virginia Woolf’ (Rigeade, p. 190).

Here, ‘Time Passes’ appears as a free-standing text, more overtly experimental than the modified version that would appear as part of the complete novel in 1927. The French translation is without any allusion to the rest of To the Lighthouse: mentions of the Ramsays have been omitted, as has the first portion of the text, describing William Bankes’s return from the terrace and the lamps in the Ramsay house being extinguished one by one.

In his useful introduction to a reprint of Mauron’s translation, together with a recently discovered intermediate English typescript, James M. Haule proposes that ‘Woolf saw periodical publication as a way to present a version of the entire section in a form that conveyed her original intention: a separate but important statement of belief and unbelief. It had not become the “corridor” between the two large sections of the novel that she sketched in her notebooks. It had become something more. By publishing this section with the help of Roger Fry and by publishing it in translation, she not only saw it into print, but also accomplished something else. She put it in the hands of a critic she admired and, owing to her severe misgivings about this section, reduced her risk of unfavourable impact from what she feared was a “hopeless mess” by publishing it in a language other than English’.

One hundred copies of this issue of Commerce were printed on Hollande Van Gelder paper and three hundred on Pur fil Lafuma. Other contributions include Valéry’s ‘Oraison funèbre d’un fable’, Fargue’s ‘Second recit du naufrageur’, and a translation of Nietzsche’s Greek Music Drama by Jean Paulhan, director of the Nouvelle Revue Française.

Provenance: From the library of William Beekman, noted collector of Woolf’s works. The William Beekman Collection of Virginia Woolf and Her Circle is now held at the New York Public Library, featuring numerous books originally owned or gifted by Virginia Woolf and Leonard Woolf.

Kirkpatrick D44. See Haule, ‘Virginia Woolf and Charles Mauron’, in Twentieth Century Literature, 29.3 (Autumn 1983); Hutcheon, Formalism and the Freudian Aesthetic: the Example of Charles Mauron (2010), appendix B; Rigeade, ‘To the Lighthouse: Recycling, Remixing, Iconising’, in Recycling Virginia Woolf in Contemporary Art and Literature (2021).

SKU: 2121905

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Amazon Customer
Waukegan, US
★★★★★ 4
Clever Space Saver with a Few Caveats
Size: Left Facing
This spice rack system really helped bring order to the chaos in my cabinet, and it looks great doing it. The vertical design makes spices visible and accessible, and the included 20 jars and 801 labels are a huge bonus for customization. 🧩 Easy to Install, But Drawer Direction Matters Setup is fairly simple, but take note: the drawer only slides out in one direction depending on which version you buy (left or right facing). As a reviewer noted on page 6, it’s not reversible, which can be a headache if your layout changes or you order the wrong orientation. 🪛 Build Quality is Solid but Assembly Could Be Smoother The frame is sturdy and feels well-made, but you’ll need to screw the rails into the base — and the screws included aren’t the best. One user suggested bolts instead of screws (page 6), and I agree. A little more care here would elevate the overall experience. 🌶️ Jars and Labels Are Fantastic This is where the system really shines. The jars are glass with metal lids and fit perfectly in the rack. The label set includes multiples in several fonts, blank ones, and even a chalk marker — very thoughtful! ✅ Pros: Excellent use of vertical space for spice organization Looks polished and professional in any cabinet Tons of labels and customization options ❌ Cons: Drawer slide direction is fixed — not reversible Screw quality is mediocre Installation requires precision (and patience) Overall: This is a well-designed and space-saving spice rack that delivers on organization and aesthetic. If you're mindful of the fixed drawer direction and take your time during install, it's a great buy for transforming messy cabinets into a neat, labeled setup.
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Reviewed in the United States on July 13, 2025
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Dan
Port Orchard, US
★★★★★ 5
Great solution to a crowded cabinet
Size: Left Facing, Size: Left Facing
This kit is a game changer. Saves a ton of space in the cupboard, and although there is some "flex" when you pull it out, it really is very stable and holds up well against frequent use. It is super easy to find the spice you're looking for with the easy to read labels, and I think they have a designated label for just about every spice imaginable. Regardless of what cuisine you cook, I think you'll be able to organize your collection in a really aesthetic, high visible way, while reclaiming some cupboard space.
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Reviewed in the United States on May 31, 2026
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Denut
New York, US
★★★★★ 5
Love it! Can’t wait to buy a second one!
Size: Left Facing, Size: Left Facing
Worth every penny!! This rack is pricy, but it’s awesome. Definitely wish the price was a little better, but I still plan on buying a second one to fit more of my spices. Super easy to install and the glide feature is really smooth. Bottles and lids are quality material and overall really pretty design. Love that it comes with TONS of spice label options for every spice you could imagine! Fit in my standard depth cabinet that is 12” deep (and I have inset cabinet doors and there was still plenty of room for it). You can easily pull it out and read the labels.
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Reviewed in the United States on January 17, 2026
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DW
Fort Morgan, US
★★★★★ 5
Aesthetic & Functional
Size: Left Facing
Good use of vertical space. It feels very secure and sturdy once mounted. It comes with everything you need, there’s a label for every spice and variation of that spice you can think of (different labels for the same spice but whole vs ground) and plenty of jars, with a few extra. Very well thought out. The tops were also standard enough to fit some of my existing spice jars so I didn’t even need to transfer those ones I just swapped lids and/or added a label. I previously had a different pull out spice rack with two flat shelves but it was a pain to find a specific spice without moving some out of the way, and it held maybe half as many jars as this one. This is an easy organization project that will free up a ton of horizontal cabinet space and makes finding spices while cooking significantly easier. If you do want to use your existing jars, make sure they have a flat side, as cylinder shaped jars roll around a bit when you slide it out. I just transferred my spices with round jars into the provided jars so wasn’t an issue for me! Really great value, especially considering how much the kit comes with!
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Reviewed in the United States on March 17, 2025
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Jennifer Kowell
Omaha, US
★★★★★ 5
Great product!
Color: Black, Size: 2 Pack
This was a great buy! It's sturdy, easy to install (I used the sticky pads), and works just as described. It created so much room in that spice cabinet - and I can finally easily find what I'm looking for. The price was great too: two sturdy slide-out racks for $20. Would highly recommend.
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Reviewed in the United States on May 6, 2026

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