Sunday, November 30, 2025

Rudolf Eickemeyer - Evelyn Nesbit

Rudolf Eickemeyer
Evelyn Nesbit
1901
platinum print
National Museum of American History,
Washington DC


Rudolf Eickemeyer
Evelyn Nesbit
1901
platinum print
National Museum of American History,
Washington DC

Rudolf Eickemeyer
Evelyn Nesbit
1901
platinum print
National Museum of American History,
Washington DC

Rudolf Eickemeyer
Evelyn Nesbit
1901
platinum print
National Museum of American History,
Washington DC

Rudolf Eickemeyer
Evelyn Nesbit
1901
platinum print
National Museum of American History,
Washington DC

Rudolf Eickemeyer
Evelyn Nesbit
1901
platinum print
National Museum of American History, Washington DC

Rudolf Eickemeyer
Evelyn Nesbit
1901
platinum print
National Museum of American History,
Washington DC

Rudolf Eickemeyer
Evelyn Nesbit
1901
platinum print
National Museum of American History, Washington DC

Rudolf Eickemeyer
Evelyn Nesbit
ca. 1901
hand-colored photoprint
(postcard derived from platinum print)
Archives of American Art, Washington DC

Rudolf Eickemeyer
Evelyn Nesbit
1901
platinum print
National Museum of American History,
Washington DC

Rudolf Eickemeyer
Evelyn Nesbit
1901
platinum print
National Museum of American History,
Washington DC

Rudolf Eickemeyer
Evelyn Nesbit
1901
platinum print
National Museum of American History,
Washington DC

Rudolf Eickemeyer
Evelyn Nesbit
1901
platinum print
National Museum of American History,
Washington DC

Rudolf Eickemeyer
Evelyn Nesbit
1901
platinum print
National Museum of American History,
Washington DC

Rudolf Eickemeyer
Evelyn Nesbit
1901
platinum print
National Museum of American History,
Washington DC

Rudolf Eickemeyer
Evelyn Nesbit
1901
platinum print
National Museum of American History,
Washington DC

from The Consolation of Philosophy

All men, throughout the peopled earth
    From one sublime beginning spring;
All from one source derive their birth
    The same their parent and their king.

At his command proud Titan glows,
    And Luna lifts her horn on high;
His hand this earth on man bestows,
    And strews with stars the spangled sky

From her high seats he drew the soul,
    And in this earthly cage confin'd;
To wond'ring worlds produc'd the whole,
    Essence divine with matter join'd. 

Since then alike all men derive
    From God himself their noble race,
Why should the witless mortals strive
    For vulgar ancestry and place?

Why boast their birth before his eyes,
    Who holds no human creature mean;
Save him whose soul enslav'd to Vice,
    Deserts her nobler origin?

– Boethius (AD 476-524), translated by Samuel Johnson and Hester Thrale (ca. 1765)

*lines in italics written by Mrs. Thrale