Thomas Jefferson’s Library

{ object_type: 'Exhibit Item',embed_type: 'image',embed_detail: 'http://www.myloc.gov/_assets/Exhibitions/ThomasJeffersonLibrary/Imagination/Assets/tj0045_125.jpg',embed_alt: 'Pliny’s Letters',thumbnail: {url: 'http://www.myloc.gov/_assets/Exhibitions/ThomasJeffersonLibrary/Imagination/Assets/tj0045_125.jpg',alt: 'Pliny’s Letters',height: '66',width: '125'} }

See Silverlight version of this item » About this item        

Jefferson chose the category of “Dialogue—Epistolary” as the chapter in which to place collected letters of authors. By and large books in this category represented classical Roman authors such as Lucianus, Cicero, and Pliny, represented here by a French and Latin edition of Pliny’s letters.
Jefferson chose the category of “Dialogue—Epistolary” as the chapter in which to place collected letters of authors. By and large books in this category represented classical Roman authors such as Lucianus, Cicero, and Pliny, represented here by a French and Latin edition of Pliny’s letters.