Stuck together, opened, and torn.
From p. 240-241 of The Life and Strange Surprising Adventures of Robinson Crusoe, written by himself (1722).
Stuck together, opened, and torn.
From p. 240-241 of The Life and Strange Surprising Adventures of Robinson Crusoe, written by himself (1722).
Water-damage-and-autolink vistas.
From the front matter of Cobb’s Juvenile Reader by Lyman Cobb (1839). Original from the New York Public Library. Digitized September 21, 2006.
“This book just has a lot of awesome things going on. Someone was practicing their math on the front blank pages and maybe someone else was practicing their handwriting on the last blank pages. There are also doodles throughout and the book appears to have suffered some water damage and rough readers (torn/ripped pages).”
Submitted by Krista Dukes, of Dr. Terry Harpold’s University of Florida course Hypermedia: Futures of Reading.
Throughout Conspiracy of Catiline by Charles Anthon (1854). Original from Harvard University. Digitized April 2, 2008.
Browning adds dimension to printed plate.
The frontispiece to The Power of Solitude: A Poem by Joseph Story (1804). Original from the New York Public Library. Digitized October 24, 2006.
Name on bookplate rendered illegible by water damage.
From the front matter of Innocence of Childhood by Mrs. Colman (1850). Original from Harvard University. Digitized April 1, 2008.
A spill.
From various pages of Marginalia; or, Gleanings From an Army Note-book by Felix Gregory De Fontaine (1864).
Water damage in color, black-and-white, and greyscale.
From various pages of The Red Book, v. 1, by Peter Hoffman Cruse and John Pendleton Kennedy (1820).
Autolink includes water damage.
From the table of contents of The Critical Review, or, Annals of Literature, v. 15, ed. by Tobias George Smollett (1763). [Here]