A Good Bite or Swallowing the Bait.
T.L. W.H [William Heath] fec.t.
Pub May 15th 1823 by G Humphrey 24 St James's St & 74 New Bond St.
Tear entering inscription area taped.
Two men stand fishing on a river bank. As one catches a frog a dog furtively munches on the fish they have caught. BM Satires 14579.
[Ref: 56738] £120.00
(£144.00 incl.VAT)
Unfortunately this item is either sold or reserved. If you are interested in similar items and cannot find what you're looking for on our website, please consider filling in our interests form. If you register, we can also send you items that match your interests when the website is updated.
Answer to John Bulls Complaint. 233.
T Tegg Cheapside [n.d.]
BM Satires 12556. W: 395.
[Ref: 52272] £230.00
(£276.00 incl.VAT)
Arithmetic. The Multiplication Table. Addition _ Division _ Fractions.
[Drawn and engraved by William Heath.]
[n.d., c.1820.]
Trimmed and laid on album paper.
A large woman falls from a gallery onto a dining table, scattering the fare. One from a series of satires on educational subjects.
[Ref: 54314] £220.00
(£264.00 incl.VAT)
A View near Bamfylde.
W H fecit. [Heath.]
Pub May 7 1823 by G Humphrey 24 St James's St & 74 New Bond St.
Trimmed within plate, to border.
Caricature gentleman walking with a stick in profile to the right; possibly a portrait of George Warwick Bampfylde, 1st Baron Poltimore (1786 - 1858). He succeeded to the baronetcy in April 1823 after his father was killed by a former servant. Print made by William Heath (1794/5 - 1840). BM Satires: undescribed.
[Ref: 15567] £140.00
(£168.00 incl.VAT)
Sketches of Fashion. Plate 1st. Showing the Difference between Beasts & Babies.
[Monogram of Paul Prey, psudonym of William Heath] Esq.r s.
Pub June 4th 1829 by T. McLean 26 Haymarket sole Publisher of P-Pry original Caricatures.
Tears entering plate on right taped, slight soiling.
A group of dandies dressing to impress, some clean-shaven, others with bushy beards. BM Satires: 15962.
[Ref: 63786] £290.00
(£348.00 incl.VAT)
Sketches of Fashion. Plate 1st. Showing the Difference between Beasts & Babies.
[William Heath.]
Pub June 4th 1829 by T. McLean 26 Haymarket sole Publisher of P-Pry original Caricatures.
Cut and laid on scrap sheet. Slight stain top left.
A group of dandies dressed to impress. BM Satires: 15962.
[Ref: 14495] £140.00
(£168.00 incl.VAT)
The Beau Monde. Our modern Ladies heads are fill'd with Bows.
William Heath. del.
Pub July 6 1829 by T. McLean 26 Haymarket - Sole publisher of - Mr Heath's Etchings.
Tears margins taped.
A young woman with a broad-brimmed hat, on which are perched a dozen miniature suitors. Not in BM Satires.
[Ref: 63785] £420.00
Old Harry looking out for a Warm Birth or a Peep in to the Oven. Vide morning Herald Thursday Oct 18th 1827.
[Paul Pry] Esqr Del.
Pub by McLean 26 Haymarket London. [b.d. c.1830.]
Some surface dirt. Trimmed past the plate mark.
Satire on Brougham's coveting of the Mastership of the Rolls (which he was not offered as it was considered too dangerous to give him an irremovable post with a seat in the Commons). Here Brougham is a broom-girl, greedily eyeing the oven of 'Rolls' and expressing how he 'would like to Master this batch'. Brougham's name in old manuscript below title. BM Satires: 15431.
[Ref: 52764] £120.00
(£144.00 incl.VAT)
Scene at the Horse Guards. You Pretend to Stop the Harry-Stocracy of the Land.
W. Heath.
Pub March 22 1832 by T: McLean 26 Haymarket.
Trimmed to printed border. Slight creasing.
Henry Brougham, in wig and gown, holding the mace across his shoulder, looks back at a Horse Guards officer, holding out two fingers. BM Satire 16616.
[Ref: 51713] £130.00
(£156.00 incl.VAT)
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A Buck and a Doe
[Paul Pry monogram] Esq Del
London, Published by Tho.s McLean 26 Haymarket, 1827
Trimmed and tipped into album sheet.
Two contrasting men, exemplifying different fashions and physiognomies. The printmaker William Heath (1794-1840) used the pseudonym Paul Pry (taken from the name of a character in John Poole's 1825 comedy, and used to describe a very inquisitive person) between 1827-9, and rather than signing his name he used the 'Paul Pry' monogram seen here, a small man holding a walking stick. However this figure began to be copied by other caricaturists (including Sharpshooter ) and so Heath reverted to his own name.
[Ref: 50799] £230.00
(£276.00 incl.VAT)
A Buck and a Doe
[Paul Pry monogram] Esq Del
London, Published by Tho.s McLean 26 Haymarket, 1827
Trimmed inside platemark; unidentified collector's stamp verso.
Two contrasting men, exemplifying different fashions and physiognomies. The printmaker William Heath (1794-1840) used the pseudonym Paul Pry (taken from the name of a character in John Poole's 1825 comedy, and used to describe a very inquisitive person) between 1827-9, and rather than signing his name he used the 'Paul Pry' monogram seen here, a small man holding a walking stick. However this figure began to be copied by other caricaturists (including Sharpshooter ) and so Heath reverted to his own name.
[Ref: 40370] £260.00
(£312.00 incl.VAT)
The M.P. Marching at the Head of his 300 Jontlemen!!!
[Paul Pry] Esq.
Pub by T McLean 26 Haymarket where Polticial and other Caricatures are daily Pub. [n.d. c.May 1829]
Trimmed past platemark.. Very small tear in right edge.
BM Satires: 15763.
[Ref: 52758] £220.00
(£264.00 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].
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)
[Catholic Relief Bill] Protestant Descendency a pull at the Church.
[Monogram of Paul Pry, pseudonym of William Heath] Esq.
Pub March 19 1829 by T. McLean 26 Haymarket where Political & other Cariactures are daily Publishing.
Trimmed within plate, mounted in album paper at edges.
A crowd of people gather in a churchyard as a man holds out a 'Petition to Parliament'. They are oblivious to the fact that the ground beneath them has been hollowed out and filled with gunpowder, with a fuse being laid by a priest, and that a crowd including Brougham, Mackintosh, Burdett, Peel and Wellington are pulling down the tower of the church onto their heads. In the background a procession of monks, priests and the Pope walks over a hill towards St Pauls Cathedral, while flames engulf the Monument. A satire on the Catholic Relief Bill. BM Satire: 15701.
[Ref: 63387] £260.00
(£312.00 incl.VAT)
[Catholic Relief Bill] Protestant Descendency a pull at the Church.
[Monogram of Paul Pry, pseudonym of William Heath] Esq.
Pub March 19 1829 by T. McLean 26 Haymarket where Political & other Cariactures are daily Publishing.
Linen pasted over left platemark, several small pinholes, some cockling of paper. Small margins. Damaged.
A crowd of people gather in a churchyard as a man holds out a 'Petition to Parliament'. They are oblivious to the fact that the ground beneath them has been hollowed out and filled with gunpowder, with a fuse being laid by a priest, and that a crowd including Brougham, Mackintosh, Burdett, Peel and Wellington are pulling down the tower of the church onto their heads. In the background a procession of monks, priests and the Pope walks over a hill towards St Pauls Cathedral, while flames engulf the Monument. A satire on the Catholic Relief Bill. BM Satire: 15701.
[Ref: 63656] £130.00
(£156.00 incl.VAT)
[Catholic Relief Bill] How To Keep One's Place. AD. 1833. The public are inform'd that T McLean is the only publisher of P.Prys Caricatures - all those without his publication are Copies.
[Monogram of Paul Pry - William Heath] Esq.
Published March 1829 by T. McLean 26 Haymarket Caricatures daily brought out._
Narrow margin at top.
The Duke of Clarence kneels before Pope Leo XII proffering a cushion with the royal crown, with Lyndhurst Wellington and Peel also genuflecting. Flanking the Pope are the 'Queen of Heaven' a woman with pinched waist and stomacher, a fat 'St Dominic', 'St Ursula' with her head under her arm and 'St Daniel' (O'Connell), in wig and gown, holding a moneybag inscribed 'Rent' and with a shillelagh against his left shoulder. A satire on the Duke of Clarence's uncompromising speech in favour of Emancipation (February 23 1829). It was expected that Clarence would be king by 1833; he became William IV the next year. BM Satires: 15689.
[Ref: 56737] £280.00
(£336.00 incl.VAT)
[Catholic Relief Bill] __Finis__.
[Monogram of Paul Pry, pseudonym of William Heath] Esq.
Pub April 1829 by T McLean 26 Haymarket where Caricatures are daily Publishing.
Repaired damage inside the plate mark on right. Small margins on 3 sides.
Satire on George IV's eventual assent to the Catholic Relief Bill (to which he was strongly opposed). Te King sits at a round library table and is poised to sign the 'Catholic Rel[ief] Bill', a long document, partly held up by Peel, who kneels. Close behind Peel are Lyndhurst and Wellington; the former uses his mace to block the coronation oath hanging on the wall, while the Duke who screens from the King a portrait of George III on the far wall. George IV's inkstand is supported on an angrily watchful British Lion. In a Gothic fireplace papers are burning: 'Petitions of the People' and 'Vox-Po[puli]'. BM Satires: 15730.
[Ref: 63725] £160.00
(£192.00 incl.VAT)
A Change in the Head of Affairs.
[Paul Pry] Esq.
London, Published by Tho.s Mc.Lean, 26, Haymarket. [n.d. c. January 1828.]
Slight crease. Cut to platemark.
Satire on the change of Ministry which followed Goderich's resignation, after which the Duke of Wellington was summoned to Windsor by George IV and commissioned to form an administration. Here the King, depicted with a huge gouty foot, hands a wig to Wellington, who declares 'Happy I am to see the Whig discarded- I'll try and Administer something that shall fit your M_ better'. Goderich had been unable to hold together the fragile coalition of Tories and Whigs assembled by his predecessor, Canning, and resigned after only 144 days in office (which was still longer than Canning had managed!) BM Satires: 15498.
[Ref: 30519] £240.00
(£288.00 incl.VAT)
Peeling a Charley.
William Heath.
Pub Sep 29th 1829 by T. McLean 26 Haymarket - Sole Publisher of W Heaths etchings.
Trimmed to printed border.
Robert Peel pulls the overcoat off a nightwatchman to throw onto a burning watch box, as the watchman begs for mercy. Another watchman hangs from a tree, still holding his lamp and rattle. An arm also holding a rattle sticks up out of a lake. A satire on the replacement of the district watch system with Peel's new police force, and the phasing out of the watch boxes which the watchmen often lived in. By William Heath (1794/5 - 1840), ex-Captain of Dragoons. From 1827-9 he used the pseudonym Paul Pry (from the name of a character in a comedy of 1825 by John Poole; however the monogram was soon copied by other caricaturists (eg Sharpshooter), so Heath reverted to using his own name. BM Satires: 15862.
[Ref: 51588] £260.00
(£312.00 incl.VAT)
A Chinese Set To._ Sketches by Travellers.
[Monogram of Paul Pry] Esq.
Pub March 2nd 1829 by T McLean 26 Haymarket political & other Caricatures daily Pub.
Abrasion in the title line. Some surface dirt.
A street brawl in China, with two Chinese pulling each other's hair and biting each other. Spectators observe with mixed reactions. Etched by William Heath and part of a series which also included scenes in the Scottish Highlands, Germany, Netherlands and Arctic. BM Satires: undescribed.
[Ref: 52711] £360.00
Comic Dance in the Popular Pantomine of the white Cat by Mess.rs Kirby & Chatterley to the Tune of the Bold Dragoon.
Drawn & Etched by W. Heath.
pub 5th of Jan.y 1812 by T. Palser Bridge Road Lambeth.
Large margins on 3 sides.
A scene of two clowns, James Kirby (died 1826) in drag & William Simmons Chatterley (1787-1822) with white face and red triangles, the signature look of Joseph Grimaldi's 'Joey' clown.
[Ref: 33086] £260.00
(£312.00 incl.VAT)
[Elizabeth Conyngham] The Guard Wot Looks Arter the Sovereign.
[Monogram of Paul Pry (William Heath)] Esq. Del.
Pub April 28 1829 by T. McLean 26 Haymarket. Carricature daily pub.
Some spotting.
Elizabeth, Lady Conyngham (1769-1861), caricatured as immensely fat, dressed as a coachman and carrying a blunderbuss, post horns hanging from her bag. She was mistress of the Prince Regent from 1819 until his death in 1830. She also had a fling with the Tsarevitch of Russia (later Nicholas I) during his visit to London in 1816. BM 15733.
[Ref: 63647] £180.00
(£216.00 incl.VAT)
[Elizabeth Conyngham] The Back Way. "That she would steal away so guilty like - Shakespeare. About about: Search Windsor Castle, elves, within & out. "Let's shift away; there's warrant in that theft...thro private paths to stray".
William Heath.
Pub July 2 1830 by T McLean 26 Haymarket London.
Some creasing and toning.
Satire on Lady Conyngham's departure from Windsor following George IV's death, published within a the event. In order to avoid being heckled by crowds she left by the less expected route, through the Home Park. Here she crawls from under the rough penthouse roof of a pigsty built against a wall of Windsor Castle, to the astonishment of a ringed hog (left). Under her arm is a large sack of plunder, reflecting the popular belief that she was took large quantities of George's valuables with her). Her daughter creeps behind her. Part of the castle visible on the right. BM Satires: 16155.
[Ref: 30463] £240.00
(£288.00 incl.VAT)
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Packing Up!!! Had sly Ulysses at the Sack Of Troy, brought thee his pedler's pack. vide Cleaveland.
W. Heath
Pub July 1st 1830 by T. McLean 26 Haymarket.
Royal mistress Elizabeth Conyngham, her husband Henry, and their daughter Harriet Maria Somerville prepare to leave Windsor following the death of George IV, struggling to pack up their belongings, including the giraffe skeleton carried by Harriet. According to the DNB, 'society believed that she was accompanied by 'wagonloads' of plunder; but although the king had bequeathed her all his plate and jewels (some of which, as family heirlooms, were not his to give) she refused the entire legacy'. BM Satires 16143. For other satires on Conyngham's departure see refs 30461 and 30463
[Ref: 39544] £280.00
(£336.00 incl.VAT)
[John Copley, Baron Lyndhurst] Dressing for the House on the __ March 1829.
[Monogram of Paul Pry, pseudonym of William Heath] Esq.
Pub March 2d. 1829 by T McLean 26 Haymarket -
Trimmed within plate, mounted in album paper at edges.
Baron Lyndhurst being dressed by a liveried footman. To the right are his mace, Purse of the Great Seal, and the Chancellor's gown. Their conversation turns to his wife's notorious affair with the Earl of Dudley (here called 'Doodle'). BM Satires: 15705.
[Ref: 63385] £260.00
(£312.00 incl.VAT)
[John Singleton Copley] Dressing for the House on the __ March 1829.
[Paul Pry] Esq.
Pub March 2d. 1829 by T McLean 26 Haymarket -
Some surface dirt particularily in the right corner, thread margins.
Satire on Baron Lyndhurst's wavering stance over Catholic Emancipation, and his wife's notorious affair with the Earl of Dudley. Lyndhurst, Chancellor under three successive Prime Ministers, had spoken against Emancipation in 1827 but was speaking in favour of it in 1829. Here it suggested he buy a new coat- 'you know you turnd it only last year & it has been turned before that. so I much doubt if it will bear turning any more [..]' Lyndhurst receives his advice from 'Doodle' (Dudley), who suggests Lyndhurst could afford to buy a new coat as 'her Ladyship earns her own expenses. Doodle pays all her bills and gives her every thing she can wish for'. Lady Lyndhurst was involved in several affairs with the wealthy and powerful. BM Satires: 15705.
[Ref: 52759] £120.00
(£144.00 incl.VAT)
Daring and Impudent Robbery!!! Do villiany, do, since you profess to do't____Like workmen; I'll example you with thieving_Thieves fro this robbery have authority_Shakespeare.
William Heath.
Pub oct 6th 1829 by T McLean 26 Haymarket sole publisher of WH-s Etchings.
Small margins. Slight stain in top edge centre.
An obese John Bull is attacked by (left) Wellington, who takes a money-bag inscribed 'Poor Rates' from his pocket, and Peel (dressed as a policeman, as in many prints following the founding of his New Police) who grabs the watch from his fob. BM Satires: 15875.
[Ref: 39177] £240.00
(£288.00 incl.VAT)
No.1 Turf Characters____"Quoth Hudibrass I smell a Rat.....
[Monogram of Paul Pry - William Heath] Esq.r del..
Pub June 26 1829 by T. McLean 26 Haymarket Sold Publisher of P. Prys Caricatures.
BM Satires: 15932.
[Ref: 55401] £280.00
(£336.00 incl.VAT)
A desert - imitation of modern fashion!
[Monogram of Paul Pry, pseudonym of William Heath]
Pub by T. McLean 26 Haymarket London [n.d., c.1825].
Trimmed into printed border.
An upturned wine glass represents a woman, with the rim the brim of a hat with grapes as decoration, the bowl her bustle. BM Satires 15611.
[Ref: 58276] £260.00
(£312.00 incl.VAT)
A Desert - Imitation of Modern Fashion!
[Monogram of Paul Pry, pseudonym of William Heath, holding a wine glass]
Pub by T. McLean 26 Haymarket London [n.d., c.1825].
Trimmed into plate on three sides, to printed border at top.
An upturned wine glass represents a woman, with the brim of a hat with grapes as decoration, the bowl her bustle. BM Satires 15611.
[Ref: 59479] £320.00
The Devils Doings or the Cruel Radical Harpies destroying A Feast. "now by St Paul's the work goes bravely on --
[Paul Pry] Esq De. They seem to be Introding here
Pub by T McLean 26 Haymarket where Political & other Caricatures are Daily brough out [n.d. c.April 1828.]
Trimmed to plate at bottom. Large margins on 3 sides.
BM Satires: 15529.
[Ref: 63724] £320.00
A Disappointment. D-n me she's a Black one.
[Monogram of Paul Pry] Esq.r Del et Sculp.
Pub by T. McLean 26 Haymarket. [n.d. c.1828.]
Trimmed within plate, paper tone and laid on card. Bit messy.
A dandy lifts the veil of a fashionably-dressed woman asleep under a tree, realising she is black. 'Paul Pry' was a pseudonym of William Heath (1794-1840).
[Ref: 46437] £160.00
(£192.00 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.]
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)
Why you infernal rascal _ how dare you stand there making such horrible Ugly Faces! - Make the Fly leave my nose alone Serjeant. Drill.
Drawn & Etched by W Heath.
Pub April 1829 by T McLean 26 Haymarket.
A sergeant addresses a line of soldiers on parade, one of whom is being stung on the nose by a bee.
[Ref: 52331] £140.00
(£168.00 incl.VAT)
A Labourer in the Good Cause.
[Paul Pry] Esq.
Pub by T McLean 26 Haymarket - [n.d. c.March 1829.]
Trimmed within plate. Faded.
Satire on Eldon's meetings with George IV. Eldon, leader of the opposition to Catholic Emancipation, induced Tory peers to use their right of demanding audience of the King in order to protest against concessions. Here he carries huge stacks of petitions to present to the King. BM Satires: 15680.
[Ref: 39168] £120.00
(£144.00 incl.VAT)
Case of Frightful Destitution the Fatal Effects of Getting out of Chancery.
[Paul Pry] Esq.
Pub by T McLean 26 Haymarket. [n.d., c.1826.] Bit later.
Small margins.
Eldon as a street beggar kneels on both knees on straw placed on paving stones, wearing the rags of a Chancellor's gown over tattered breeches. Round his neck is a placard reaching below the waist, inscribed, 'Pity a poor Old Man out of Place, at the age of 78, and though extremely anxious, for employment, disappointed in, all his expectations of procuring the Same. [...]' Beside him an emaciated dog stands on its hindlegs holding a begging dish. BM Satires 15504.
[Ref: 39620] £240.00
(£288.00 incl.VAT)
An. Election. Ball.
[Paul Pry] Esq. Del.
London Published by McLean, 26 Haymarket. [n.d., c.1829].
Trimmed.
An interior view in which a well dressed dandy bows and takes the hand of the plain daughter of a grotesquely fat mother, to the shock and confusion of the guests behind. The ballroom can be seen through an open facade in the background. By William Heath (1794/5-1840) ex-Captain of Dragoons, illustrator of colour-plate books, and prolific caricaturist. He published regularly with Thomas McLean. Not in BM Satires.
[Ref: 32033] £260.00
(£312.00 incl.VAT)
An Election Ball.
[Monogram of Paul Pry, pseudonym of William Heath] Esq. dl.
London, Published by M.cLean 26 Haymarket [n.d. c.1829].
A dandy takes the hand of the plain daughter of a grotesquely fat, but rich, mother.
[Ref: 63391] £280.00
(£336.00 incl.VAT)
The Man Wot Violates the Grave. It's very hard these sort of men can't let a Body be = O she loved a bold Dragoon with his long _&c&
W. Heath.
Pub Jan 30 1830 by T McLean 26 Haymarket.
Crease.
The Duke of Cumberland steps up from a grave, carrying Lady Graves, with whom Cumberland had been having an affair. In 1830 this scandal erupted in the press, and shortly after this print was published Lady Graves' husband Thomas committed suicide, adding to the macabre imagery of this print. BM Satires: 16011.
[Ref: 30541] £260.00
(£312.00 incl.VAT)
[Ernest Augustus, Duke of Cumberland] Looking Grave on the New Appointment. [in ink underneath image:] Duke of Cumberland.
W. Heath.
Pub July 6 1830 by T. McLean 26 Haymarket-London.
Hand-coloured etching. 354 x 255mm (14 x 10"). Cut at top, old ink mms in margin.
A caricature of a concerned-looking Ernest Augustus, Duke of Cumberland, as the accession of his brother William IV put an end to his influence on English politics. He was passed over in favour of his brother the Duke of Sussex for the post of Ranger of St. James's Park and Hyde Park, given Windsor Park instead. The 'Grave' in the title is a reference to Cumberland's affair with Lady Graves (1783 - 1835). BM Satires: 16156.
[Ref: 30465] £220.00
(£264.00 incl.VAT)
[Ernest Augustus, Duke of Cumberland] The Resurrectionist. Alas ther is no Happiness on this side of the Graver!!! - Then come my love to TIHS.
W. Heath.
Pub Feb. 1st 1830 by T. M.cLean, 26 Haymarket - Sole Pub. of W. Heaths etchings.
Trimmed to printed border.
The Duke of Cumberland and Lady Mary Graves (wife of the duke's Comptroller of the Household) stand either side of an open grave, from which an arm rises holding a cane with the cuckhold's horns. When he heard rumours that Mary was having an affair with the Duke, Thomas North Graves wrote a note to his wife expressing his confidence in her innocence, then cut his own throat. BM Satires: 16012, second state, with the surtitle.
[Ref: 63394] £190.00
(£228.00 incl.VAT)
Mad.e Duval Dancing a Minuet at the Hampstead Assembly. page 277.
W. Heath del.
London, Published by Jones & Co Feb.y 16 1822.
Scene from Frances Burney's novel 'Evelina': Madame Duval dances with a flamboyant gentleman at the Hampstead Assembly, London, while the assembly looks on.
[Ref: 45890] £65.00
(£78.00 incl.VAT)
Mad.e Duval Dancing a Minuet at the Hampstead Assembly. page 277.
W. Heath del.
London, Published by Jones & Co Feb.y 16 1822.
Madame Duval dances with a flamboyant gentleman at the Hampstead Assembly, London, while the assembly looks on. A scene from Frances Burney's novel 'Evelina':
[Ref: 61000] £85.00
(£102.00 incl.VAT)
''We have the exhibition to examine"
[William Heath.]
Pub. by T. McLean 26 Haymarket London.
Hand-coloured etching. Sheet 255 x 355mm (10 x 14''). Cut to borders. Some repaired nicks to edges.
A scene in an exhibition salon in which specatators struggle to see the paintings through the large crowd and enormous hats. One disgruntled man wipes his head in exasperation after his daughter tries to disuade him from leaving.
[Ref: 56453] £320.00
The March of Bonnetism.
[By William Heath.]
Pub by T. McLean, 26 Haymarket where Published and other Caricatures are daily Pub.
Creases and tears on margins.
[Ref: 60499] £280.00
(£336.00 incl.VAT)
It is the very fashion of the time. Which cannot look more hideously [/] Than I have drawn it in my fantasy.
[Paul Pry] Esq. Del.
Pub by T. McLean 26 Haymarket. For November 1827. To be continued every month.
Unexamined out of frame.
An elaborately dressed woman stands with her gloved right hand resting on her extremely small waist. She is wearing a bright red dress and an emerald green cloak, with white fur trim. Her large hat is decorated with ribbons and feathers. A quote from Shakespeare's King Henry IV Part II, is inscribed underneath the title. By William Heath (1794/5-1840) ex-Captain of Dragoons, illustrator of colour-plate books, and prolific caricaturist. He published regularly with Thomas McLean. Not in BM Satires.
[Ref: 37474] £290.00
(£348.00 incl.VAT)
[Sir Charles Flower] The Misfortune of having Short Legs or the Flower of the flock loseing his stick! Vide city police.
W. Heath.
Pub. Jan.y 26 1830 by T. McLean 26 Haymarker Sole Publisher of W. heath Etchings.
Paper tone, foxing, messy. Small margins.
A caricature of Alderman Sir Charles Flower attempting to get into a carriage, behind him a shop keeper carrying a large turtle. BM Satire 16414.
[Ref: 50805] £180.00
(£216.00 incl.VAT)
French Salutation. English Salutation.
[Paul Pry, monogram of William Heath ] Esq.
Pub May 1829 by T McLean 26 Haymarket.
Stained, cut. Damaged top right.
Two designs side by side, both of an accidental meeting of pedestrians, and contrasting the exhuberant Frenchmen with gloomy Englishmen. BM Satires: 15961.
[Ref: 30517] £220.00
(£264.00 incl.VAT)
Geography, or the Use of the Globes _ A Practical Lesson. Shewing the Face of the Earth.
W. Heath Del et Sculp.t.
[n.d., c.1820.]
Trimmed and laid on album paper.
A red-faced teacher hurls a desk globe into the face of a mischievious pupil. One from a series of satires on educational subjects.
[Ref: 54312] £220.00
(£264.00 incl.VAT)
[George IV] The Slap Up Swell wot Drives when Hever He Likes.
[William Heath] Esq. Del.
Pub April 1829 by T McLean 26 Haymarket.
Trimmed and mounted into album sheet.
A caricature of George IV, showing him in a position of authority. 'Slap up' dates, as northern slang, from c.1823 (BM Satires via Partridge's 'Slang Dictionary'). BM Satires 15732.
[Ref: 46656] £260.00
(£312.00 incl.VAT)