The Speeches of the Right Honorable William Pitt, in the House of Commons. 2nd edition. London, 1808. A remarkable fine series of fore edge paintings appear on the edges of the three volumes. Each volume bears a double fore edge painting (fanned to the left) making six in all. Each of the six paintings is divided into three parts, consisting of a central scene or view with a portrait on either side. There are in all nineteen separate subjects, one of the paintings having an extra portrait above the central scene. Here pictured Napoleon

Featured on PDR in the collection Fore-Edge Book Paintings from the Boston Public Library

A "fore-edge painting" is an illustration or design which appears on the "fore-edge" of a book (i.e. on the edge which is opened up, opposite to the spine). The history of such embellishments is thought to go back to the tenth century but it wasn't until the eighteenth century that the unusual practice really began to take off. The simplest form involved painting onto the fore-edge when the book was closed normally — hence the image appears by default — but a more advanced form involved a rather ingenious technique whereby the painting was applied to the page edges when the stack was fanned at a slight angle. This way the image is hidden from view when the book is closed normally. To hide any…

Fore-edge for a copy of The Speeches of the Right Honorable William Pitt

Date

1808


Underlying Rights

Public Domain Worldwide

Digital Rights

No Additional Rights

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Image Size

1023 x 353 Higher res available?

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