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A Downright Gabbler, or a Goose that Deserves to be Hissed
A Downright Gabbler, or a Goose that Deserves to be Hissed
Image © Worcester Art Museum, all rights reserved.

A Downright Gabbler, or a Goose that Deserves to be Hissed

Artist (American, about 1773–1846)
Date1829
Mediumlithograph with watercolor on cream laid paper
Dimensionssheet: 23 x 27 cm (9 1/16 x 10 5/8 in.)
image: 17.8 x 19.9 cm (7 x 7 13/16 in.)
ClassificationsPrints
Credit LineCharles E. Goodspeed Collection
Object number1910.48.26
DescriptionFrom the Library of Congress: Caricature of Frances "Fanny" Wright, British-born activist, exponent of female suffrage, and outspoken critic of slavery. The title's reference to Wright as a "gabbler" probably alludes to her sensational American lecture tour of 1829. Wright wears a black dress and long white scarf, and has the head of a goose. She stands reading from a book and gesturing, before a speaker's table with candles, pitcher, glass, and books. Behind her stands a young man, holding her bonnet and looking on. Mrs. Kemble's costume and the scene itself -- with its table, water, candles, and acolyte-like attendant -- seems intended to suggest an underlying parallel with liturgical rites.
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