[LINDSAY, Norman (1879-1969), illustrator]. MCCRAE, Hugh (1876-1958). Satyrs and Sunlight. Being the Collected Poetry of Hugh McCrae? London: The Fanfrolico Press, 1928. 4to. Illustrated with numerous collotype or gravure plates. [177], [3, blank] pp. Publisher's deluxe binding of full green pebbled sheepskin, front board and spine stamped in gilt (spine and corners strengthened at ends, spine toned and lightly worn, some toning, soiling to binding, some light edgewear, hinges just starting, text lightly toned at margins). Very good. Bookplate of Harry H. Mole on fp. FIRST EDITION THUS, ONE OF 550 COPIES PRINTED ON BARCHAM GREEN'S PAPER, ?OUT OF SERIES" SIGNED BY JACK LINDSAY TO DENNIS BRADLEY. Norman Lindsay on Bradley: ?Norman Lindsay said the two persons in England he'd like to meet were Aldous Huxley and Dennis Bradley. ?The reason for A. H. lay in my enthusiasm for Antic Hay, which I had carried up to Springwood; and it was because of Bradley's spiritualist experiments?'" As per Jack Lindsay: ?? I had also come to know Dennis Bradley, the tailor of Bond Street, who put eccentric advertisements (common enough now, but then very unusual) in the English Review and who had written the best-selling book on clothes, The Eternal Masquerade. He was also a spiritualist." (Life Rarely Tells by Jack Lindsay, 1982). Housed in modern tan cloth clamshell case. From the Collection of Louis A. Irmo. Measurements: 13 x 11 x 2".