Isaac Gomez. Selections of a Father for the Use of His Children.

AUCTION 60 | Thursday, November 14th, 2013 at 1:00
Fine Judaica: Printed Books, Manuscripts, Autograph Letters, Graphic Art and Ceremonial Objects

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Lot 15
(AMERICAN JUDAICA)

Isaac Gomez. Selections of a Father for the Use of His Children.

<<FIRST EDITION>> . Present copy contains an approbation from President John Adams pasted in. pp. viii, 9-408. Foxed. Contemporary calf, rubbed, joints starting. 8vo. Singerman 322; Rosenbach 209

New York, 1820: Southwick and Peluse 1820

Est: $1,500 - $2,500
PRICE REALIZED $1,500
This literary anthology for adolescents, included an approbation by John Adams that was pasted into a few copies only. Adams judged that the book was “worthy to be presented by every father to every child, and deserve a place in every family.” Gomez’s Jewish affiliation resonates in the book with his decision to include a selection from The History of Pope Pius V, which is the source for the “pound of flesh” incident in Shakespeare’s Merchant of Venice. As opposed to Shakespeare’s telling, in the History of Pope Pius V, it is the Jew who is the victim and the Christian who threatens him. Gomez prefaced the selection by writing: “The following subject shows that Shakespeare altered the character of Shylock, making him to be of the Jewish nation, when in reality he was not.” As Louis Harap notes (The Image of the Jew in American Literature, p. 260), “Gomez was obviously trying to combat the effects of the Shylock stereotype.” Isaac Gomez (1768-1831), whose great-grandfather had fled from Portugal to New York in 1703, was active in New York’s Jewish community. The few early literary contributions by American Jews “was anything but impressive, but Gomez’s book is worth remembering as one of American Jewry’s earliest literary efforts… Gomez, both a devotee of the humanities and a committed Jew, lived comfortably ensconced in the two worlds of the Jew and the cultured American” (J. R. Marcus, United States Jewry, vol. 3, p. 455). See also Blau and Baron, The Jews of the United States, 1790-1840, Vol. II, pp. 440-2.