(SLAVERY & ABOLITION.) Lydia Maria Child. The Fountain for Every Day in the Year
(SLAVERY & ABOLITION.) Lydia Maria Child. The Fountain for Every Day in the Year (with Patrick Reason's famous engraving). Stipple-engraved frontispiece of a kneeling female slave by Patrick Reason. 208 pages. 32mo (2¾ x 2¼ inches), publisher's gilt cloth, moderate wear; long closed tear to title page, moderate foxing; bookplate of "The Anti-Slavery Office" of Philadelphia on front pastedown. New York: R.G. Williams for the American Anti-Slavery Society, 1836 Second edition of this book of biblical quotations for each day of the year. Each passage is followed by a quote by a modern author, usually linking it directly to the abolition movement. The frontispiece is an important variation on Josiah Wedgwood's iconic "Am I not a man and a brother" image from 1787. It was produced by Patrick Henry Reason (1816-1892) of New York, an early African-American engraver. The image went on to be used frequently by the American Anti-Slavery Society, often with the addition of the caption "Am I Not a Woman and a Sister." Afro-Americana 2277.
[ translate ]Sale price
Estimate
Reserve
Time, Location
Auction House
(SLAVERY & ABOLITION.) Lydia Maria Child. The Fountain for Every Day in the Year (with Patrick Reason's famous engraving). Stipple-engraved frontispiece of a kneeling female slave by Patrick Reason. 208 pages. 32mo (2¾ x 2¼ inches), publisher's gilt cloth, moderate wear; long closed tear to title page, moderate foxing; bookplate of "The Anti-Slavery Office" of Philadelphia on front pastedown. New York: R.G. Williams for the American Anti-Slavery Society, 1836 Second edition of this book of biblical quotations for each day of the year. Each passage is followed by a quote by a modern author, usually linking it directly to the abolition movement. The frontispiece is an important variation on Josiah Wedgwood's iconic "Am I not a man and a brother" image from 1787. It was produced by Patrick Henry Reason (1816-1892) of New York, an early African-American engraver. The image went on to be used frequently by the American Anti-Slavery Society, often with the addition of the caption "Am I Not a Woman and a Sister." Afro-Americana 2277.
[ translate ]