File:"The Little Magician Invoked" Martin Van Buren, US Presidential Election, 1844.jpg
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Summary
Description"The Little Magician Invoked" Martin Van Buren, US Presidential Election, 1844.jpg |
English: Title: The little magician invoked
Related Names: Baillie, James S., active 1838-1855. Bucholzer, H. Date Created/Published: N.Y. : Lith & pubd. by J Baillie, 1844. Medium: 1 print : lithograph on wove paper ; 32.5 x 44.3 cm. (image) Summary: Martin Van Buren, known as "the Little Magician" for his remarkable political agility, summons spirits to divine the Democratic or "Loco Foco" prospects for election in 1844. He sits in an astrological circle, conjuring up three imps in the smoke of his pipe, and addresses them: Spirits white and Gray appear! appear! / my call attend! my power revere! / Their destiny the Locos ask / Apply ye to the mighty Task! First spirit: Loco-Focos! desperate Chaps. / Make your speech & draw your Caps! / You've had your day--you've had free scope / And hanged yourselves with your own rope! Second spirit: When Arnold rises form the Tomb / To receive a Traitors doom! / When Yankee Children bear his name / And all are proud of Arnolds Fame! / Then Tyler shall his honors share, / And keep the Presidential chair! Third spirit: When the stars fall from above. / When the Globe shall cease to move, / When flowers grow amid the snow / And Lions fear the timid Roe. / When Lawyers shall refuse a feel / And misers pray for poverty /Till then, you'll find that many folk, / Will never vote for Master Polk! / Till then, they'd swing upon the Gallows / Before they'd vote for Master Dallas! Democratic nominees James K. Polk, wearing the striped trousers associated with the Loco Foco or radical wing of the Democratic party, and George M. Dallas stand at right. Visibly awed, Polk says, "By Heavens! these words remind me of the dream I had when I first heard of my nomination!" Dallas, fleeing to the right, asserts, "I'll get out of this scrape as quick as possible Texas wont save us!" On the left Andrew Jackson brandishes his cane and threatens, "By the Eternal! you old Hags! if I get hold of you, I'll hang you all up under the 7th section as I did Arbuthnot and Ambisiserter!" Alexander Arbuthnot and Robert Ambrister (not "Ambister") were two Englishmen hung by Jackson during the Florida campaign in 1818, for aiding the Seminole Indians in their fight against the general's militia. The act was one which Jackson's political foes invoked throughout his career as evidence of his brutality. Reproduction Number: LC-USZ62-91417 (b&w film copy neg.) Rights Advisory: No known restrictions on publication. Call Number: PC/US - 1844.B157, no. 17 (B size) [P&P] Repository: Library of Congress Prints and Photographs Division Washington, D.C. 20540 USA http://hdl.loc.gov/loc.pnp/pp.print Notes: Entered . . . 1844 by J. Baillie. Lith and pubd. by J Baillie 118 Nassau St. N.Y. Signed: H. Bucholzer. The Library's impression was deposited for copyright on August 23, 1844. Title appears as it is written on the item. Weitenkampf, p. 81. Forms part of: American cartoon print filing series (Library of Congress) Published in: American political prints, 1766-1876 / Bernard F. Reilly. Boston : G.K. Hall, 1991, entry 1844-40. United States presidential election |
Date | |
Source | Library of Congress |
Author | Date Created/Published: N.Y. : Lith & pubd. by J Baillie, 1844. |
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current | 14:23, 30 March 2014 | 640 × 450 (79 KB) | Matanya | Transferred from en.wikipedia |
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