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Title
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en_US
Aesop Junior in America
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Description
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en_US
This is a hardbound book (hard cover)
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Creator
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en_US
Greaves, Alexander (supposed author)
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Date
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2016-01-25T16:19:06Z
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en_US
2002-11
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en_US
1834
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Date Available
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2016-01-25T16:19:06Z
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Date Issued
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en_US
1834
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Abstract
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en_US
I have seen this book described and even illustrated somewhere, and now I cannot find it. I have looked in Schiller, Quinnam, Ashby, Hobbs, Fabula Docet, and McKendrick. I do find it in my favorite private collector, who notes the frontispiece etching of George Washington and the etched title page. He also mentions briefly the second thing that struck me about the book-after the title-page engraving of an American Aesop among the animals-and that is the length of the last fable. The Horse Resolved to be Free is thirty-three pages long, twenty-four of them given to the moral! Generally the book seems to be sustainedly preachy. Even the short fables I tried present almost no action. For example, the crocodile's tears in XIV are called hypocritical by the vulture about to eat the crocodile's eggs (22-23). So? The spine of both copies is weak. The good copy has just the first page of the T of C (covering the first fifty-one of the seventy-seven fables). The second copy lacks both the T of C and the first twelve pages. I will keep both copies in the collection. I have not seen this book except in the Library of Congress, where I was able to ascertain quickly that it does not contain traditional Aesopic material.
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Identifier
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en_US
Bodemann identifier 281.1
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en_US
2759 (Access ID)
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Language
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en_US
eng
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Publisher
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en_US
Printed for the author by Mahlon Day
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en_US
NY
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Subject
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en_US
PN982.A3 1834
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en_US
Title Page Scanned
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Type
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en_US
Book, Whole