(London): Hodder & Stoughton, 1934. First English edition of James Hilton’s tale of the shy schoolmaster Mr. Chipping, who over the course of a long career becomes a legend at Brookfield, “a good school of the second rank.” Deeply Victorian in sympathy, “Mr. Chips” rises to the challenge of the First World War, and survives into the 1930s, beloved by generations of boys: “In my mind you never grow up at all. Never.” Originally issued as a supplement to The British Weekly in 1933, Goodbye, Mr. Chips was reprinted in The Atlantic in April 1934, followed by book publication in the United States in June and England in October; the nostalgic novel was a runaway bestseller during the Depression, inspiring the Oscar-winning 1939 Hollywood film starring Robert Donat. This first English edition is wonderfully illustrated by Ethel “Bip” Pares, one of England’s leading Art Deco book designers. Accompanied by two typed letters written and signed by Hilton, during his stint as…