Donne, Juvenilia, 1633 (F1v)

This blank page is surprisingly busy. There’s ink bleeding through from the other side (you can see the running title “PARADOXES” at the top and the signature mark “F” at the bottom of the page) but there’s also offset from the facing page (“PROBLEMS”, the title of the next section). It can sometimes be hard to tell the difference between bleed-through and offset in digital images if you can’t also see the facing page, but one clue is to look for different colored ink. But if you look at this page under raking light, you’ll see there’s even more going on than is apparent in this image.

This blank page is surprisingly busy. There's ink bleeding through from the other side (you can see the running title "PARADOXES" at the top and the signature mark "F" at the bottom of the page) but there's also offset from the facing page ("PROBLEMS", the title of the next section). It can sometimes be hard to tell the difference between bleed-through and offset in digital images if you can't also see the facing page, but one clue is to look for different colored ink. But if you look at this page under raking light, you'll see there's even more going on than is apparent in this image.

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John Donne, Iuuenilia: or Certaine paradoxes and problemes. London: Elizabeth Purslowe for Henry Seyle, 1633. (sig. F1v)

Folger Shakespeare Library, STC 7043.2 (CC BY-SA)

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