A Philosopher In Search Of The Wind.
Painted By Robert Farrier. Drawn On Stone By Thomas Fairland.
[n.d. c.1837]
Rare lithograph, sheet 475 x 380mm (18¾ x 15). Trimmed losing publication line.
A curious boy has disassembled some bellows to see how they work. Onlookers surround him. One lad points and laughs. Robert Farrier (1796–1879) was an English artist best known for his paintings. Farrier first exhibited at the Royal Academy in 1818, sending some miniature portraits, and in 1819 exhibited the first of a series of pictures in a slightly humorous vein, depicting domestic subjects, and especially scenes from schoolboy life. These were popular, and a number of them were engraved. Thomas Fairland (1804-52) was a lithographer, engraver, draughtsman and portrait painter. Protégé of Queen Victoria, produced lithographs after Edwin Landseer and William Hunt.
[Ref: 61186] £260.00
(£312.00 incl.VAT)
The able Doctor or America Swallowing the Bitter Draught.
[London Magazine, n.d. c.1774]
Etching, plate 115 x 165mm (4½ x 6½"), good margins on three sides. Thread margin at bottom. Some time staining below title.
Satire on the The Boston Port Bill and the other Coercive Acts that were passed as a punishment for the 'Boston tea-party' (16 Dec. 1773). America restrained by Lord Mansfield (1705-93), dressed in judges robes and wig, is force fed tea by North (1732-92). From his pocket hangs a paper inscribed "Boston Port Bill". Behind Mansfield stands Bute (1713-92) in Scots cap and kilt, holding a drawn sword, its blade inscribed "Military Law", pistols are thrust through his belt.John Montagu, 4th Earl of Sandwich (1718-92) holds down America's legs and lifts up her dress to peek. Watching behind Sandwich are representations of France and Spain. In the foreground is a torn document inscribed "Boston petition". An allegorical figure of Britania averts her eyes as if shamed. In the background is the sea; on the horizon and on a minute scale are the spires of a town surrounded by ships, above is engraved, "Boston cannonaded". BM 5226.
[Ref: 61284] £850.00
The true Effigies of the Members of the Calves Head Club, held on the 30.th of January 1734. in Suffolk Street in ye County of Middlesex. The Healths were To the Pious memory of Oliver Cromwell, Damn.n to the Race of ye Stuarts [...]
[n.d., c.1735.]
Scarce etching, Sheet 205 x 155mm (8 x 6"). Trimmed into plate, laid on album paper. Slight crease top left.
Satire on young Whig supporters and their supposedly republican tendencies. A scene outside the Golden Eagle in Suffolk Street, near Charing Cross, with a mob around a bonfire. In the windows above are seven young gentlemen, one holding a calf's head and another, who is masked, brandishing an axe. The original Calve's Head Club was said to be a republican secret society meeting in the 1690s. A dinner of young aristocrats was held on 30 January 1735, aping the earlier club, led to disorder when the mob found out what was occuring. BM Satires 2144.
[Ref: 61309] £380.00
[Untitled plate - 'The Petitioning Cantabs'.]
Publish'd 13th March 1786 By S. Watts N° 50 Strand.
Etching with sepia wash. Sheet 175 x 265mm (7 x 10"). Trimmed to plate, laid on album paper.
Four undergraduates approach a fat parson at a well-stocked dining table, begging for food. They say: ''Behold! Sir your half starvd Petitioners''; ''I can make a Norfolk Dumpling! Thanks be to Miss Diana Young for her instruction!''; "Allow us but a Mutton-Chop"; and ''And your Petitioners shall ever pray''. The parson retorts ''No! Eating and drinking cloud yr understanding you shall have none''. A satire on the ban of entertainments in private rooms by James Backhouse, the Dean (and parson here). Behind him stands Henry Gordon, butler of Trinity College, with a demonic tail. The BM identifies Diana Young as a courtesan who intended to give lectures on entertainment in private rooms at the college. BM Satires 7017.
[Ref: 61042] £260.00
(£312.00 incl.VAT)
John Bull in Perplexity or Ascendancy versus Union._ His progress they said depended on Ascendancy; and this, they told him was Ascendancy_and consequently the only thing that could do him good. Westminster Review No.19.
[Monogram of Paul Pry, pseudonym of William Heath.]
Pub. by T. McLean 26 Haymarket London [n.d., c.1828].
Rare hand-coloured etching. Framed, sight size 255 x 440mm (10 x 17¼"). Framed over printed border, unexamined out of frame.
A very large satirical scene showing the various politicians involved with the debate regarding Catholic emancipation. On the far left, Wellington and Robert Peel stand on the outskirst of a group of figures including Brougham, with a broom in his pocket, Burdett, Scarlett and Eldon. On the right the Duke of Cumberland dances with the devil and in the distance a waggon labelled 'Common State Waggon John Bull & Co.' rushes towards the scene driven by George IV. BM Satire 15658.
[Ref: 61230] £280.00
(£336.00 incl.VAT)
[Chartism] A Couple of Cochranites. Fly Leaves No. 1.
J. Leech.
London: _ Published at the Punch Office .
Lithograph. Sheet 265 x 190mm (10½ x 7½"). Laid on album paper.
Two street urchins attend a Chartist rally in Trafalgar Square, led by a 'Mr Cochrane', believing the goals are no 'Hincome Tax' and the 'Pastry cooks shops throw'd open to the people free, gratis, for nothink!!!'. By John Leech (1817-64).
[Ref: 61109] £130.00
(£156.00 incl.VAT)
Now Tomkins stop till I Say Fire!! another go I think will do him up.
London Pub.d by O Hodgson 111 Fleet St. [n.d., c.1838.]
Coloured lithograph. Sheet 170 x 260mm (6¾ x 10¼). Creasing on left margins. Trimmed.
Two city types shoot at a songbird.
[Ref: 61330] £60.00
(£72.00 incl.VAT)
Any sport Gentlemen? - Sport to be sure, we just saw an hare runningup a tree so we both fired and down it came. we knows what we are about you see.
London Pub.d by O Hodgson 10 Cloth Fair [n.d., c.1832.]
Coloured lithograph. Sheet 150 x 220mm (6 x 8¾). Some staining at top. Trimmed.
A city type hold up a squirrel he has mistaken for a hare.
[Ref: 61329] £70.00
(£84.00 incl.VAT)
The Laughing Stock No. 7. I say Tomkins which Eye do you shut when you shoots? _ O for a common shot I [don't care?] which I shuts but when I shoots flying I shuts em both of course.
London Pub.d by O Hodgson 10 Cloth Fair [n.d., c.1832.]
Coloured lithograph. Sheet 160 x 240mm (6¼ x 9½). Punchline weakly inked, laid on album paper. Trimmed.
Two city types out shooting discuss their techniques, the skyline of London behind.
[Ref: 61328] £90.00
(£108.00 incl.VAT)
[Oliver Cromwell] The difference of Times between those Times and these Times.
[n.d., c.1800.]
Rare etching. Sheet 195 x 270mm (7¾ x 10½"), on wove paper. Trimmed and mounted in album paper watermarked 1819.
A copy of a satirical medal struck in the Netherlands circa 1655 to ridicule the subservience of the French and Spanish kings to Oliver Cromwell. The 'heads' side has a roundel portrait of Cromwell in armour; the 'tails' has Cromwell kneeling with his head on Britannia's lap, his bottom exposed for them to kiss. A re-engraved copy of a print from c.1739. See BM Satires 894 & 2417.
[Ref: 61154] £160.00
(£192.00 incl.VAT)
A curious Junto of Slandering Elves - or - List'ners seldom hear good of themselves.
EHL del. G. Cruikshank sculp.
Pub.d by Tho.s McLean, 25, Haymarket, Aug.t. 1st 1835.
Etching. Sheet 240 x 345mm (9½ x 13½"). Trimmed into printed border, laid on album paper with some cockling.
An elderly women reads gloatingly from a pile of letters to three others seated at a round tea-table, one of whom uses an ear trumpet. A fifth listens in dismay from behind a curtain. First published by Hannah Humphrey in 1817. BM Satires 12923; Cohn 1032.
[Ref: 61046] £130.00
(£156.00 incl.VAT)
[Dr Syntax] Misfortune at Tulip Hall.
Drawn by Rowlandson.
[London: R. Ackermann, 1821, but later.]
Coloured aquatint. Sheet 160 x 245mm (6¼ x 9¾"). Edges chipped.
Dr Syntax is tripped by a dog, knocking over flower pots on shelves, as the dog bites his ankle and his hostess sprays him from her watering can. From 'The Third Tour of Dr. Syntax, In Search of a Wife'.
[Ref: 61308] £65.00
(£78.00 incl.VAT)
Drill. Why you infernal rascal_how dare you stand there making such horrible ugly faces! _ Make the fly leave my nose Serjeant.
Drawn & Etched by W. Heath.
[n.d., c.1820.]
Hand coloured etching. Framed, sight size 170 x 230mm (6¾ x 9"). Framed over printed border, unexamined out of frame.
An angry Serjeant berates a soldier, who is standing to attention, as he pulls faces to dislodge a wasp on his nose.
[Ref: 61188] £180.00
(£216.00 incl.VAT)
A Transfer of East India Stock.
J.S. [James Sayers] f.
Published 25th Nov.r 1783 by Thomas Cornell, Bruton Street.
Etching. Sheet 305 x 230mm (12 x 9"). Trimmed to plate, some creasing and spotting.
Charles James Fox carries the East India House through the gateway of St. James's Palace. He treads on a list of East India Company directors. A satire on Fox's attempts to bring the Company under the control of the government, particularly the sovereignty of India. BM Satires 6271.
[Ref: 61318] £130.00
(£156.00 incl.VAT)
The Beach King discovering himself to Matilda. vide. Edwin and Matilda Canto 3.d. Plate 7, Vo,l. 2.
[after Thomas Rowlandson.]
Nº 9. of the Poetical Magazine. Pub. Jan. 1. 1810, at R. Ackermann's Repository of Arts, 101, Strand.
Coloured aquatint. Sheet 130 x 210mm (5¼ x 8¼"). Trimmed within plate.
The giant Beach King, leaning on a club of coral, grabs Matilda's wrist to stop her fleeing.
[Ref: 61314] £95.00
(£114.00 incl.VAT)
The Exalted Reformer; or The Humours of Birmingham.
[n.d, 1791.]
Engraving. 175 x 110mm (7 x 4½"), large margins on 3 sides.
A scene of a cleric being burnt at the stake in a fire of his books. It was published to accompany a satirical article in ''The Gentleman's and London Magazine: Or Monthly Chronologer'', titled ''Fate of the Un-Priestly Doctor''. It proports to be an event in the Birmingham Riots of 1791, in which the mob targeted religious dissenters, including Joseph Priestly, who was forced to flee his home.
[Ref: 61106] £95.00
(£114.00 incl.VAT)
Fashion is But One Creature Apeing Another.
Alfred Crowquill - Glypho [after Alfred Henry Forrester].
[n.d., 1844.]
Scarce electrotype. Printed area 120 x 105mm (4¾ x 4¼"). Spotting.
A monkey wearing a cap and a coat with fur collar and cuff, smoking a pipe at a window. "Fashion is but One Creature Apeing Another" Crowquill affirmed in this hilarious send-up of the 19th century British gentleman caricature. Patented in 1842, a glyphograph is a relief printing block, created by drawing through a compostion on a metal plate, and making an electrotype of the result. See Bestiary: Animals in Art. Christopher Matthews, Thomas & Hudson, 2018.
[Ref: 61302] £140.00
(£168.00 incl.VAT)
[Fashion and Folly: or the Buck's Pilgrimage.] Dashall and Lubin, at a masquerade [...]
[Henry Alken.]
[London: William Sams, 1822.]
Coloured etching with letterpress verse underneath, J. Whatman, Turkey Mill watermark. Sheet 120 x 220mm (4¾ x 8¾"). Trimmed.
A fancy-dress party, including a devil and a skeleton. A scene from 'Fashion and Folly. Or the Buck's Pilgrimage', Lubin, a nabob with a country estate, travels with his friend Dashall to London, where they experience both high and low life with no regard for expense, ending up in debtor's prison. Abbey 487.
[Ref: 61305] £90.00
(£108.00 incl.VAT)
Fishing in Troubled Waters, or The Consequence of invading Matrimonial Rights & Privileges.
Pub.d by Pyall & Hunt, 18 Tavistock Street [n.d., 1824-5].
Coloured etching. Sheet 255 x 340mm (10 x 13½"). Trimmed to image on three sides, creased, mounted in album paper.
An angling cleric comes to blows with a fishwife, accidently pulling his own wig off with his rod and line. Apparently a satire on the Church's interference with marital law. Not in BM Satires. Hunt 62. Ex: Collection of David Beazley.
[Ref: 61132] £260.00
(£312.00 incl.VAT)
[Charles James Fox & Frederick North] The Cole-Heavers. ''Two virtuous Elves, / Taking care of themselves''.
[by James Gillray.]
Pub.d April 16th 1783 by W. Humphrey, N.o 226, Strand.
Etching, 18th century watermark. Sheet 235 x 315mm (9¼ x 12½"). Trimmed to image on three sides.
A scruffily-dressed Charles James Fox, with a fox's head and brush, holds open a sack marked 'For Private Use' for Frederick North to shovel guineas into. Empty sacks hang on a wall under a scroll reading 'For the Use of the Publick'. In April North returned to power as Home Secretary in an unlikely coalition with Fox, the radical Whig leader, only lasting to December. 'Cole' was slang for gold or money. BM Satires 6213.
[Ref: 61043] £230.00
(£276.00 incl.VAT)
King's Frauds of London Detected. Page 92.
[London: Alexander Hogg, 1778.]
Rare engraving. 155 x 85mm (6 x 3¼"), with very large margins.
A man is propositioned by a prostitute. With a four-line verse underneath. A plate from Richard King's ''The Frauds of London Detected; or a Warning-Piece against the Iniquitous Practices of That Metropolis''.
[Ref: 61113] £80.00
(£96.00 incl.VAT)
[George IV] Gudgeon Fishing a la Conservatory.
[Charles Williams.]
Pub.d July 1811 by S.W. Fores 50 Piccadilly.
Coloured etching. Trimmed within plate, mounted on album paper at corners.
The Prince Regent presides over a fête held to honour the Duchesse d'Angoulême, daughter of Louis XVI. The ladies hold fishing rods, with which they try to catch goldfish in a pool in the centre of the table. One of the guests is Richard Brinsley Sheridan, who holds a paper 'Nominal Subscribers to the Humbug Theatre', a reference to his raising funds for rebuilding Drury Lane Theatre. BM Satires 11729, with extensive description.
[Ref: 61133] £260.00
(£312.00 incl.VAT)
[George IV as Prince of Wales] Barataria.
J.S.
Publ. 11.th March 1789 by Tho.s Cornell Bruton Street.
Etching. 300 x 335mm (11¾ x 13¼'') very large margins. Central crease and tears reinforced with tape.
The Prince of Wales is seated in a magnificent dining-hall before a bare table. The Duke of Leinster offers him across the table a dish of 'Potatoes from Leinster'; the Prince extends his arms to take them, but turns his head to look at the forbidding Thurlow, dressed as a doctor, who stands on his right. A satire of the Irish offer to the Prince of an unrestricted Regency by James Sayers. Here Ireland is called Barataria (the non-existant island that Sancho Panza is offered governorship of, in 'Don Quixote'), a term used in satirical letters in the style of Junius published in newspapers. BM Satires 7517.
[Ref: 61144] £170.00
(£204.00 incl.VAT)
[George IV & Wellington] A Political Reflection.
[Monogram of Paul Pry, pseudonym of William Heath.] Esq.
Pub. by T. McLean 26 Haymarket London.
Coloured etching. Framed, sight size 240 x 350mm (9½ x 13¾"). Creased, framed over printed border, unexamined out of frame.
A scene in a nursery in which the 'Great Babe' George IV lies asleep in a cradle watched over by his mistress Lady Conyngham. On the right Wellington lowers the crown on to his head as he admires himself in the mirror. On the floor is a model of Buckingham Palace as reconstructed by Nash and a toy giraffe. Children's toys interest. A satire of Lady Conyngham's use of her influence over George to support Wellington. BM Satire 15521.
[Ref: 61172] £280.00
(£336.00 incl.VAT)
The Ghost.
F. G. Byron Esq.r delin.t. Engraved by J Pettit.
London Pub by Will.m Holland. N° 50. Oxford Street, July 29. I789. In Holland's Exhibition Rooms may be seen the largest collection of Humorous Prints in Europe. Admittance one Shilling.
Coloured etching. Sheet 250 x 290mm (9¾ x 11½"). Trimmed to image on three sides, into plate at top.
A figure with a grotesque mask and draped in a sheet advances into a room, holding up a red-hot poker. Four men look alarmed and a fifth escapes up the chimney. BM Satires 7614.
[Ref: 61137] £360.00
[The Adventures of Gil Blas] Doctors Andros & Oquetos.
[n.d., c.1820.]
Watercolour on embossed card. Sheet 90 x 125mm (3½ x 5").
A scene from Alain-René Lesage's 'L'Histoire de Gil Blas de Santillane'. When Don Vincent falls ill, the two doctors that arrive have opposing views about treatment.
[Ref: 61103] £95.00
(£114.00 incl.VAT)
A Good Bite or Swallowing the Bait.
T.L. W.H. [William Heath] fecit.
Pub May 15th 1823 by G Humphrey 24 St James St & 74 New Bond St.
Etching with fine hand colour. 130 x 165mm (5 x 6½"), paper watermarked 'J Whatman 1832', with very large margins.
Two men stand on a river-bank fishing disconsolately; one short and obese, the other tall and thin. The latter hooks a frog. Close behind them a hound is furtively devouring fish which lie on the grass. BM Satires 14579.
[Ref: 61110] £130.00
(£156.00 incl.VAT)
[John Horne Tooke] The Apostate Parson. [It] is true I have Suffer'd the infectious hand of a Bishop to be wav'd over me, whose Imposition like the Sop given to Judas is only a Signal for the Devil to enter. [&c].
[Publish'd as the Act directs April 14th 1772, by W. Darling, Engraver, Great Newport Street.]
Etching. Sheet 195 x 240mm (7¾ x 9½") Trimmed, losing either end of secondary title and publication line.
A bishop, standing behind an altar-rail, holds out both hands over the head of a kneeling clergyman. One demon kneels on the ground beside the latter, while another has crept under his cassock. Behind is a trunk, with a list of expensive clothes. A satire on the ordination of John Horne Tooke, quoting a letter of his to Wilkes in 1766. The trunk of clothes is one Tooke sent to Wilkes in Paris: after they quarrelled Tooke accused Wilkes of pawning them. BM Satires 4948.
[Ref: 61149] £130.00
(£156.00 incl.VAT)
Humming-birds _ or _ a Dandy Trio.
J.S. Esq.r [John Sheringham] del. G. Cruik.k etch'd.
Pub.d by Tho.s McLean, 25, Haymarket, Aug.t. 1st 1835.
Etching. Sheet 240 x 340mm (9½ x 13¼"). Trimmed into printed border, laid on album paper with some cockling.
Three dandies play musical instruments and sing in an opulent living room, one playing a flageolet while admiring himself in a mirror. Sharing a sofa with a lutenist is a grotesquely clipped poodle suckling puppies. First published by Hannah Humphrey in 1819. BM Satires 13446; Cohn 1216.
[Ref: 61048] £160.00
(£192.00 incl.VAT)
[Wellington & William Huskisson] A Naughty Boy Turn'd out of School.
[Monogram of Paul Pry, pseudonym of William Heath] he seems let them know who is master of th House
Pub by T McLean 26 Haymarket. [n.d. c. May 1828].
Coloured etching. Framed. 245 x 350mm (9¾ x 13¾"). Unexamined out of frame.
Satire on the departure from Wellington's cabinet of William Huskisson, represented here as a schoolboy in a fool's cap kneeling before a closed door placarded 'Wellington House Academy'. Huskisson, who had entertained hopes of becoming prime minister before the position was offered to Wellington, voted against the government over the East Retford Bill and subsequently offered to resign 'as a matter of form, not substance' (DNB). Wellington, however, took him at his word and seized the opportunity to rid himself of an uncomfortable colleague. As a result Huskisson's friends Dudley, Palmerston and Grant, along with the Irish Secretary Lamb all resigned (their names are written on a slate next to Huskisson in the print), a situation described by the Duke as a 'mutiny'. BM Satires: 15532.
[Ref: 61195] £230.00
(£276.00 incl.VAT)
The Angler. An Irishman Angling one day in the Liffey [...]
[n.d., c.1800.]
Etching with fine hand colour. Sheet 170 x 215mm (6¾ x 8½"). Trimmed, losing publication line, cut into image in places.
An Irish angler fishes under a bridge, thinking ''the ?shes will ?ock under here, to keep out of the wet''.
[Ref: 61111] £220.00
(£264.00 incl.VAT)
Two of a Trade can never Agree. 22
[Charles Williams.]
Pub.d Feb.y 1st 1806 by S W Fores 50 Piccadilly.
Coloured etching. Sheet 120 x 85mm (4¾ x 3¼"). Trimmed close to printed border, laid on album paper.
Two bewigged barristers argue. Legal interest. George suggests this print belongs to a series of reduced versions of satires etched by Williams after other artists, in this case Isaac Cruikshank (1799, BM 1948,0214.410). BM Satires 10667.
[Ref: 61105] £65.00
(£78.00 incl.VAT)
The Looking Glass or Character Annual 1834 Vol. 5. The Fiddling, Firing, Feasting, Fuming year 1834. Destruction of both Houses of Parliament by Fire 16.th Oct.r 1834.
R.S.
London. Thomas M.cLean, 26 Haymarket. Ducote and Stephen 70 S.t Martins Lane.
Hand coloured lithograph, sheet 380 x 255mm (15 x 10"). Some surface dirt top left.
The Looking Glass was a large-sized lithographed four-page monthly magazine composed entirely of comicalities. The first seven issues were drawn by William Heath and published by the print seller and publisher Thomas McLean of 26 Haymarket. Heath departed and the eighth issue was drawn by Robert Seymour from Aug 1, 1830, to April 1836.
[Ref: 61142] £160.00
(£192.00 incl.VAT)
[The Mail Coach in a Flood.]
[Painted by James Pollard. Engraved by F. Rosenberg.]
[London, Published Sep. 21, 1827, by John Watson, 7 Vere Street, Bond Street.
Fine & rare aquatint, proof before all letters, printed in colours and finished with exceptional hand colour. 335 x 445mm (13¼ x 17½"). Framed in a "fancy" Daniell frame.
A superb example of this coaching print, depicting a mail coach pushing through a flood. A measuring pole shows the depth of the water to be 2½ feet. One of a set of four plates of coaches in bad weather by James Pollard (1792-1867). Siltzer p.217.
[Ref: 61204] £380.00
The Man that Couldn't Get Warm. Then close to a blazing fire he got, & took to drinking Brandy hot. / And sent for doctors, such a lot, The man that couldn't get warm. / Shivery Shakey Oh! Oh! Oh! &c.
[n.d., c.1840.]
Coloured woodcut. Sheet 195 x 240mm (7¾ x 9½"). Small splits in binding folds taped.
An illustration to the ballad of the same title, words by J. Beuler.
[Ref: 61099] £130.00
(£156.00 incl.VAT)
[Vinegar Valentine] Abroad You're Quite the Masher and Smoke Your Cigarette! At Home You Are a Puppy Whom No One Cares to Pet!
[n.d., c.1850.]
Photo lithograph, printed in black and red. Sheet (unfolded) 375 x 130mm (14½ x 5"). Very slight toning of edges.
A portrait of a dandy with monocle, cigarette and cane, unfolds to reveal a bulldog on a chain lunging at a cat. Vinegar Valentines are rather unflattering and often insulting; some addressed to trades and professions, perhaps given to customers to their suppliers, rather than true valentines.
[Ref: 61325] £70.00
(£84.00 incl.VAT)
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Meetingers.
[n.d., c.1830.]
Coloured woodcut. Sheet 160 x 185mm (6¼ x 7¼"). Trimmed close to printed border, repaired tear entering image.
An old lady holding a prayer book asks a man if he knows of a meeting nearby. The man, who is dressed is good but worn-out clothes, replies that he is holding a meeting of his creditors and would be offering only 'Five Farthings in the Pound'. A 'meetinger' was a name for a Protestant dissenter.
[Ref: 61095] £80.00
(£96.00 incl.VAT)
The Members' Plate. Sir Maurice: ''I say old fellow, I shall have to make the running this time! If you hand't been in the Coalition Handicap, you would'nt have had all that weight to carry!!''.
[W. Henley, 1. Southgate Street, Gloucester, c.1860.]
Scarce wood engraving. Sheet 115 x 205mm (4½ x 8"), on Whatman laid paper. Trimmed, losing publication line, laid on album paper.
One jockey addresses another, who has a Chinese man riding pillion.
[Ref: 61044] £160.00
(£192.00 incl.VAT)
A Po-lice-Man Vot Does His Duty.
London: Published by J.L. Marks, 91 Long Lane, Smithfield [n.d., c.1850].
Coloured woodcut. Sheet 190 x 140mm (7½ x 5½"). Trimmed close to printed border, tears taped.
A policeman attempts to seize a boys piece of bread and butter.
[Ref: 61094] £75.00
(£90.00 incl.VAT)
[Pair of French postillions.]
[Henry Bunbury].
[n.d., c.1768.]
Two etchings with drypoint on one sheet. Each 145 x 100mm (5¾ x 4"), paper watermarked 'R & E'. Unfinished proof.
Two caricatures usually found separately. On the left is a French Postillion with a whip in one hand, the other in his pocket, birds, horses and a barn behind. On the right is another Postillion, looking over his shoulder, whip in hand, with a distant church. Both men wear oversized boots. BM Satire 4743 & 4745.
[Ref: 61315] £190.00
(£228.00 incl.VAT)
Receiving Absolution for Past Heresies. Pl.2_
[Monogram of Paul Pry - William Heath.] Esq.
Pub by T Mc Lean 26 Haymarket. [n.d. c.1830].
Etching with hand colour. Framed, sight size 240 x 335mm (9½ x 13¼") Framed over printed border, unexamined out of frame.
Satire on Catholic emancipation: a caricatured papal legation watch as a cardinal gives absolution to Lyndhurst, Peel, and Wellington, who kneel before them. BM Satires: 15740.
[Ref: 61229] £240.00
(£288.00 incl.VAT)
The Red Rover in Chase of a Free Trader.
[n.d., c.1830.]
Coloured woodcut. Sheet 155 x 185mm (6 x 7¼"). Trimmed close to printed area.
A naval officer with a red, bulbous nose and a protrunding belly runs up to a young woman.
[Ref: 61096] £80.00
(£96.00 incl.VAT)
Will You have a game of Skittles with us to night M.r Flanagan? / I would with pleasure M.r Raffata but I am larning the Piano and playing Skittles will spoil the delicacy of my touch.
London Pub.d by O Hodgson 111 Fleet St. [n.d., c.1838.]
Coloured lithograph. Sheet 180 x 260mm (7 x 10¼). Trimmed at top. Right corner missing in lower margin.
A road builder using a compactor worries about how skittles would affect his hands.
[Ref: 61327] £80.00
(£96.00 incl.VAT)
Where are You A Driving too Spooney?
[Monogram of an open hand] del.
[n.d., c.1825.]
Coloured etching. Sheet 220 x 160mm (8¾ x 6¼"). Trimmed to printed border.
A man wearing fashionable sunglasses walks into the handle on a butcher's tray, poking himself in the eye. On the tray is a beef heart and kidneys.
[Ref: 61326] £75.00
(£90.00 incl.VAT)
[Sweeps racing donkeys.]
Collet inv.t et del. Hancock sculp.
London printed for R. Sayer at Nº53 Fleet Street as the Act directs [n.d., c.1760].
Etching. Sheet 140 x 200mm (5½ x 8"). Trimmed within plate, laid on album paper.
Two chimney sweeps race donkeys down a country lane, a parody of horse racing.
[Ref: 61148] £65.00
(£78.00 incl.VAT)
Extraordinary Sale. Disposal of Theatrical Property: a Peep behind the Scenes. Proteus bidding for a Suit of Theatrical Armour.
Drawn & Engraved by Theo.e Lane.
[London: C.S. Arnold, 1825.]
Coloured aquatint. Sheet 120 x 190mm (4¾ x 7½"). Trimmed and mounted in album paper.
An extraordinary auction in a room full of props, including a dragon hot-air balloon, globe, harp, Pegasus and masks. An auctioneer on raised platform. From Pierce Egan's 'The Life of an Actor'.
[Ref: 61317] £160.00
(£192.00 incl.VAT)
The Thistle Reel.
[London Magazine, 1st March 1777.]
Etching. Sheet 210 x 120mm (8¼ x 4¾"). Trimmed to plate on left.
Three government ministers (William Murray, 1st Earl of Mansfield; Frederick North, 2nd Earl of Guilford; & John Stuart, 3rd Earl of Bute) dance around a thistle, watched over by a bagpipe-playing Devil. Lord Mansfield in judge's wig and gown holds the Quebec Bill. American interest. An attack on the Government's policies in America (such as The Boston Port Bill and the other Coercive Acts) blaming Bute's Scottish influence. BM Satires 5285.
[Ref: 61295] £360.00
Cost of a Waterloo Medal.
[William Heath.]
[Pub Oct 1st 1829 by T McLean 26 Haymarket Sole publisher of W.H.s Etchings.]
Coloured etching. Framed, sight size 220 x 320mm (8¾ x 12½"). Trimmed around title, losing inscriptions, framed over image on three sides, unexamined out of frame.
A French and a British soldier sit at ale-house table. The Frenchman hold out his grand Legion of Honour medal for comparison to what he describes as the 'nasty Waterloo medal - shabby - cost your Nation only two francs'. The Englishman answers with a good-humoured smile, 'That's true - but it - cost yours - A Napoleon!!!'. BM Satires: 15868, an earlier state with Napoleon spelt 'Napolean'.
[Ref: 61171] £180.00
(£216.00 incl.VAT)
[Arthur Wellesley, Duke of Wellington] The Man Wot Drives the Sovereign.
[Paul Pry] Esq.
Pub April 1829 by T. McLean 26 Haymarket.
Coloured etching. Framed, sight size 355 x 240mm (14 x 9½"). Framed over platemark, unexamined out of frame. Foxing, spot in top right.
Wellington stands in profile to the right, with his gloved left hand touching the broad brim of his hat. He is dressed as the driver of a mail-coach, holding his whip and a paper resembling the 'Gazette', headed 'Bill', representing the Catholic Relief Act of 1829. BM Satires 15731.
[Ref: 61179] £180.00
(£216.00 incl.VAT)
[Arthur Wellesley, Duke of Wellington] Tragedy. Waterloo 1815. Comedy. Oxford 1834. All the worlds a Stage, and all the Men and Women merely players [...]
I.B.
Pub.d October 14, 1834 by J.B. Brooks, 9 New Bond Street.
Coloured lithograph. Framed, sight size 225 x 185mm (8¾ x 7¼"). Unexamined out of frame.
A double caricature comparing the tragedy of Waterloo with the comedy of Wellington being made Chancellor of Oxford University. Rare: not in BM Satires.
[Ref: 61232] £180.00
(£216.00 incl.VAT)