Letter from William Powell Frith to Henry Keyworth Raine, April 4, 1893
Part of a collection of 21 letters sent by William Powell Frith to his great nephew Henry Keyworth Raine, dating from March 16, 1890 to March 29, 1908. William Powell Frith (1819-1909), painter of historical and genre works, including large canvases such as Derby Day (1858). “The Race for Wealth” comprises five paintings, all based around a fictional central character, a corrupt financier called The Spider, and all dealing with the theme of reckless financial speculation. Inspired by characters found in the novels of Charles Dickens and Anthony Trollope, The Spider persuades his victims to invest in dubious schemes. Often compared with Hogarth’s “The Rake’s Progress,” “The Race for Wealth” portrays The Spider’s initial success, his unmasking, his trial, and ends with his imprisonment.
- In Collection:
- Number on first page of letter: 5
- 2 pages ; 15 x 20 cm, folded to 15 x 10 cm
- 51.50853, -0.12574
- Handwritten in black ink. A quarter of the page has been cut and is missing. Address letterhead on right hand side: "Ashenhurst, Syndenham Rise, Forest Hill, S.E.".
- 19th Century Manuscripts
- Accession Number: 2022-007
- Special Collections Finding Aid: https://uvic2.coppul.archivematica.org/peter-lowens-collection
- February 10, 2022
- Scanned on Plustek OpticBook A300 at 600 DPI Tiff. Items cropped and resized for Vault. Metadata by MT.
- Rights
- Contact Special Collections and University Archives for access to the original. This material is made available on this site for research and private study only.
- DOI
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