Editore: H. D. Symonds and T. Bellamy, London, 1797
Da: Raven & Gryphon Fine Books, Hackett's Cove, NS, Canada
EUR 543,06
Quantità: 1 disponibili
Aggiungi al carrelloHardcover. Condizione: Very Good. A Pin-Basket to the Children of Thespis: part the fourth; Historical, Critical & Biographical; by John Williams, whose public appellation is Anthony Pasquin; London. Printed for H.D. Symonds, Paternoster-Row; and T. Bellamy. King-Street, Covent-Garden, 1797. The first part of this work was published in 1786. John Williams (17611818) was an English poet, satirist, journalist, and miscellaneous writer, best known by the pseudonym of Anthony Pasquin. The Dedication reads to the Noblemen and Gentlemen constituting that very Honorable Society, called The Literary Fund and it goes on for 28 pages. The poem, A Pin-Basket goes from page 29 to the Finis page 232. He was a very controversial person, tarting at a young age and continuing throughout his life. In 1771, he was beaten for an epigram on Mr. Knox, the third master. At the age of seventeen he was placed with a painter, but he gave up art to become an author and translator. When he was about eighteen he wrote a defence of David Garrick against William Kenrick, earning Garrick's friendship. About two years later he went to Ireland, and during his time in Dublin edited several periodical publications. He attacked the government in the Volunteers' Journal during the administration of the Duke of Rutland, a prosecution was started against him in 1784, and he was obliged to decamp, leaving the printers to face the judgment. The same year (1784) he was associated with Henry Bate Dudley in the Morning Herald. A violent quarrel broke out between them, and Williams wrote a satire on his antagonist, for which he was prosecuted, though the action did not proceed. In 1787 Williams accompanied his friend Pilon to France, and on his return he started a paper called The Brighton Guide. He next settled at Bath, Somerset, but again left in a hurry. For some years he contributed influential theatrical criticism to some of the London newspapers. In 1797 he appeared in the Court of King's Bench as plaintiff in an action against Robert Faulder, the bookseller, for a libel contained in William Gifford's poem The Baviad. In one of the notes Gifford, speaking of Williams, observed that 'he was so lost to every sense of decency and shame that his acquaintance was infamy and his touch poison.' In this cause, the plaintiff was nonsuited, based the proof that was given of his having himself grossly libelled every respectable character in the kingdom, from the sovereign down to the lowest of his subjects. Lloyd Kenyon, 1st Baron Kenyon, who tried the case, commended Gifford. Williams emigrated to America shortly afterwards and edited a New York newspaper called The Federalist. He died a poor man of typhus fever in Brooklyn, on 23 November 1818. This small format book, pages measuring 165mm X 100mm, is in very good condition. The full leather binding is a bit scuffed but overall very presentable and the title on the spine is quite readable. The book is very tight and stands on its own very well. The title page is mostly missing. A previous owner has handwritten the title page description on the first free endpaper, and the vignette from the title page has been pasted inside the front cover. The text block is clear with no staining or foxing. There are a few pencil notations. This book is extremely rare, with print-on-demand copies only available on the internet, at the time of this writing.