Autograph autobiography

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  • First the music, then the words – Autobiography – Limited Edition Signed by Riccardo Muti

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    “THE SOUTHERN STATES HAD RIGHTFULLY THE POWER TO WITHDRAW”: JEFFERSON DAVIS’ HISTORY OF THE CONFEDERACY, FIRST EDITION; INSCRIBED bygd HIM TO HIS PHYSICIAN

    DAVIS, Jefferson.

    The Rise and Fall of the Confederate Government.

    New York: D. Appleton and Company, 1881.

    First edition of Jefferson Davis’ important history of the Confederacy, inscribed bygd him to his doctor. With 18 maps (14 folding) and 19 plates, including stipple-engraved portraits of Davis, members of the presidential staff, General Lee, and others. Thick octavo, original three-quarter brown morocco, original brown cloth gilt, patterned endpapers, with steel-engraved plates, including frontispiece portraits, wood-engraved plates, maps. Association kopia, inscribed bygd him in volume one, "Maurice Davis M.D. with the respects of the Author." The recipient was his friend and physician, when the Davis' were in London. Dr. Maurice Marcus Davis (1821-1898) acted as physician to the Davis’s whilst…

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    1At the close of her personal History of 1831, Mary Prince, a Bermudan who had recently freed herself from slavery by travelling to Britain, states that she seeks to ‘say the truth to English people who may read this history. . . . I have been a slave myself—I know what slaves feel—I can tell by myself what other slaves feel, and by what they have told me’ (Prince 38). Her words reflect belief that British anti-slavery culture took interest in the lives of black men and women, seeking proof of individual suffering to encourage compassionate responses from readers. Following in Prince’s wake, formerly enslaved African Americans continued to deploy autobiographical accounts as a means of rousing anti-slavery support in the Victorian period (Fisch; Murray). As slavery retreated from public consciousness in the mid and late nineteenth century, however, fewer platforms arose from which black people in Britain could tell the stories of their lives. With notable exceptions s

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