Design for wrappers of serial issue, in black on grey paper, in two states, the earlier or trial-state, having blank spaces for the lettering, only the title being given as "La Mort Darthure."
XXV. Design in gold on cream-white cloth cases of the bound volumes.
Nineteen of the above designs were republished in "A Book of Fifty Drawings," and again in "Later Work," including full-size reproductions of the following, which had suffered through excessive reduction in the published "Morte Darthur."
XXVI. Merlin (in a circle), facing list of illustrations in Vol. I. The same reproduced in The Idler, March 1897.
XXVII. Vignette of Book I., chapter xiv. Landscape with piper in a meadow and another figure in the sky.
XXVIII. Vignette of Book III., chapter iii. Three swans swimming.
XXIX. Vignette of Book V., chapter x. Nude woman rising out of the sea, holding in one hand a sword, in the other a rose.
60. Pall Mall Magazine, June 1893.
I. Of a Neophyte, and how the Black Art was revealed unto him by the Fiend Asomuel. Full-page illustration in pen and ink. Asomuel, meaning insomnia, was a neologism of the artist's own devising, made up of the Greek alpha privative, the Latin somnus, and the Hebrew el, for termination analogous to that of other spirits' names, such as Gabriel, Raphael, Azrael, etc., reproduced in "Early Work," July 1893.
II. The Kiss of Judas. Full-page illustration in pen-and-ink. Reproduced in "Early Work."