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authornfenwick <nfenwick@pglaf.org>2025-02-05 20:46:15 -0800
committernfenwick <nfenwick@pglaf.org>2025-02-05 20:46:15 -0800
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+This eBook, including all associated images, markup, improvements,
+metadata, and any other content or labor, has been confirmed to be
+in the PUBLIC DOMAIN IN THE UNITED STATES.
+
+Procedures for determining public domain status are described in
+the "Copyright How-To" at https://www.gutenberg.org.
+
+No investigation has been made concerning possible copyrights in
+jurisdictions other than the United States. Anyone seeking to utilize
+this eBook outside of the United States should confirm copyright
+status under the laws that apply to them.
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+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #51978 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/51978)
diff --git a/old/51978-0.txt b/old/51978-0.txt
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-The Project Gutenberg EBook of Hogarth's Works, Volume 2 (of 3), by
-John Ireland and John Nichols
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most
-other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
-whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms of
-the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at
-www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you'll have
-to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook.
-
-Title: Hogarth's Works, Volume 2 (of 3)
- With life and anecdotal descriptions of his pictures
-
-Author: John Ireland
- John Nichols
-
-Release Date: May 3, 2016 [EBook #51978]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: UTF-8
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK HOGARTH'S WORKS, VOLUME 2 (OF 3) ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by Chris Curnow, John Campbell and the Online
-Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This
-file was produced from images generously made available
-by The Internet Archive)
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- TRANSCRIBER'S NOTE
-
- Italic text is denoted by _underscores_.
-
- Bold text is denoted by =equal signs=.
-
- A superscript is denoted by ^; for example ESQ^R.
-
- Obvious typographical errors and punctuation errors have been
- corrected after careful comparison with other occurrences within
- the text and consultation of external sources.
-
- Footnotes have been moved to the end of the book text, and before
- the publisher's Book Catalog. Some Footnotes are very long.
-
- The 3-star asterism symbol in the Catalog is denoted by ⁂.
-
- More detail can be found at the end of the book.
-
-
-
-
- HOGARTH'S WORKS:
-
- WITH
-
- _LIFE AND ANECDOTAL DESCRIPTIONS OF HIS PICTURES_.
-
-
- SECOND SERIES.
-
-[Illustration: MARRIAGE A LA MODE. PLATE I.]
-
-
-
-
- HOGARTH'S WORKS:
-
- WITH
-
- _LIFE AND ANECDOTAL DESCRIPTIONS OF
- HIS PICTURES._
-
- BY
-
- JOHN IRELAND AND JOHN NICHOLS, F.S.A.
-
- [Illustration]
-
- _THE WHOLE OF THE PLATES REDUCED IN EXACT
- FAC-SIMILE OF THE ORIGINALS._
-
- Second Series.
-
- London:
-
- CHATTO AND WINDUS, PUBLISHERS.
- (_SUCCESSORS TO JOHN CAMDEN HOTTEN._)
-
-
-
-
-LIST OF PLATES
-
-DESCRIBED IN THE SECOND SERIES.
-
-
- PAGE
- MARRIAGE A LA MODE--
-
- PLATE I. The Marriage Settlement, _Frontispiece_
-
- PLATE II. The Viscount and his Lady at Home, 24
-
- PLATE III. The Viscount's Visit to the Quack Doctor, 28
-
- PLATE IV. The Countess's Morning Levee, 36
-
- PLATE V. The Husband killed in a Bagnio, 40
-
- PLATE VI. Death of the Countess, 44
-
- FIRST STAGE OF CRUELTY, 54
-
- SECOND STAGE OF CRUELTY, 56
-
- CRUELTY IN PERFECTION, 58
-
- THE REWARD OF CRUELTY, 62
-
- BEER STREET, 66
-
- GIN LANE, 68
-
- PAUL BEFORE FELIX (Burlesqued), 74
-
- PAUL PREACHING BEFORE FELIX, 76
-
- THE SAME--ANOTHER ENGRAVING, 78
-
- MOSES AND PHARAOH'S DAUGHTER, 82
-
- FOUR PRINTS OF AN ELECTION--
-
- PLATE I. The Entertainment, 88
-
- PLATE II. Canvassing for Votes, 98
-
- PLATE III. The Polling, 106
-
- PLATE IV. Chairing the Member, 112
-
- THE MARCH TO FINCHLEY, 122
-
- THE INVASION--
-
- PLATE I. France, 140
-
- PLATE II. England, 142
-
- THE COCKPIT, 146
-
- CREDULITY, SUPERSTITION, AND FANATICISM, 160
-
- THE TIMES--
-
- PLATE I., 180
-
- PLATE II., 208
-
- JOHN WILKES, ESQ., 222
-
- THE REV. C. CHURCHILL, 228
-
- BOYS PEEPING AT NATURE (2 Plates), 244
-
- THE LAUGHING AUDIENCE, 246
-
- THE LECTURE, 250
-
- THE ORCHESTRA, 254
-
- THE COMPANY OF UNDERTAKERS, 258
-
- CHARACTER AND CARICATURE, 266
-
- SARAH MALCOLM, 268
-
- COLUMBUS BREAKING THE EGG, 276
-
- THE FIVE ORDERS OF PERIWIGS, 284
-
- THE BENCH, 290
-
- THE BEGGARS' OPERA, 292
-
- THE INDIAN EMPEROR, 300
-
- THE BATHOS, 312
-
-[Illustration: (end of section floral icon)]
-
-
-
-
-HOGARTH ILLUSTRATED.
-
-
-
-
-MARRIAGE A LA MODE.
-
- "'Tis from high life our characters are drawn."
-
-
-In his preceding prints Mr. Hogarth generally pointed his satire at
-persons in a subordinate situation, and took his examples from the
-inferior ranks of society. From the situation of his characters, and
-the minute precision with which he displayed the scenes he professed
-to delineate, we sometimes see little violations of that decorum
-which is perhaps necessary in engravings professedly designed for
-furniture. For this neglect of delicacy some of his prints were
-censured; to remove all apprehensions of this series being liable to
-the same objections, they were thus announced in the _London Daily
-Post_ of April 7, 1743:--
-
- "Mr. Hogarth intends to publish, by subscription, six prints
- from copperplates, engraved by the best masters in Paris after
- his own paintings; the heads, for the better preservation
- of the characters and expressions, to be done by the author,
- representing a variety of modern occurrences in high life, and
- called 'Marriage à la Mode.'
-
- "Particular care is taken that the whole work shall not be liable
- to exception, on account of any indecency or inelegancy; and that
- none of the characters represented shall be personal, etc."
-
-The artist has adhered to his engagement: he has struck at an
-higher order, and displayed the follies and vices which frequently
-degrade our nobility. He has exhibited the prospect of a fashionable
-marriage, where the gentleman is attracted by riches, and the lady
-by ambition. That misery and destruction succeeded an union founded
-upon such principles is not to be wondered at; the progress of that
-misery, and the final destruction of the actors, is so delineated
-as to form a regular and well-divided tragedy. In the first act
-are represented five principal characters; and three of them, by a
-regular chain of incidents naturally flowing from each other, fall
-victims to their own vices. The young nobleman, for attempting to
-revenge the violation of his wife's virtue, which he never cherished,
-is killed by her paramour, who for this murder suffers an ignominious
-death; and the lady, distracted at the reflection of having been
-the cause of their lives terminating in so horrid a manner, makes
-her own quietus with a dose of laudanum. This is painting to the
-understanding, appealing to the heart, and making the pencil an
-advocate in the cause of morality. It is doing that poetical justice
-which our dramatists have sometimes neglected, and in which they have
-perhaps been justified by the common events of human life; for it
-must be acknowledged, that while virtue is frequently unfortunate, we
-often see vice successful. Notwithstanding this, those pictures are
-surely best calculated to encourage men in the practice of the social
-duties which display the evils consequent upon their violation.
-Whatever poetical justice may allow, morality demands that some
-examples should be held up to prove "that the omission of a duty
-frequently leads to the perpetration of a crime; and that crimes of
-so black a dye as are here represented, almost invariably terminate
-in wretchedness, infamy, and death."
-
-The original pictures were, on the 6th of June 1750, purchased by
-Mr. Lane of Hillingdon, near Uxbridge, for one hundred and twenty
-guineas!--a price so inadequate to their merit, and to what it might
-have been fairly presumed they would have produced even at that
-time, that it becomes difficult to account for it in any other way
-than by supposing that the strange way in which Mr. Hogarth ordered
-the auction to be conducted puzzled the public, who, not exactly
-comprehending this new mode of bidding, declined attending or bidding
-at all.
-
-The following particulars relative to the sale were communicated by
-Mr. Lane to Mr. John Nichols:--
-
-"Some time after the pictures had been finished, perhaps six or
-seven years, they were advertised to be sold by a sort of auction,
-not carried on by personal bidding, but by a written ticket, on
-which every one was to put the price he would give, with his name
-subscribed to it. These papers were to be received by Mr. Hogarth for
-the space of one month, and the highest bidder at twelve o'clock,
-on the last day of the month, was to be the purchaser: none but
-those who had in writing made their biddings were to be admitted on
-the day that was to determine the sale. This _nouvelle_ method of
-proceeding probably disobliged the public, and there seemed to be
-at that time a combination against poor Hogarth, who, perhaps, from
-the extraordinary and frequent approbation of his works, might have
-imbibed some degree of vanity, which the town in general, friends
-and foes, seemed resolved to mortify. If this was the case (and to
-me it is very apparent), they fully effected their design; for on
-the memorable 6th of June 1750, which was to decide the fate of
-this capital work, about eleven o'clock, Mr. Lane, the fortunate
-purchaser, arrived at the Golden Head, when, to his great surprise,
-expecting (what he had been a witness to in 1745, when Hogarth
-disposed of many of his pictures) to have found his painting room
-full of noble and great personages, he only found the painter and
-his ingenious friend Dr. Parsons, secretary to the Royal Society,
-talking together, and expecting a number of spectators at least, if
-not of buyers. Mr. Hogarth then produced the highest bidding, from a
-gentleman well known, of £110. Nobody coming in, about ten minutes
-before twelve, by the decisive clock in the room, Mr. Lane told Mr.
-Hogarth he would make the pounds guineas. The clock then struck
-twelve, and Hogarth wished Mr. Lane joy of his purchase, hoping it
-was an agreeable one. Mr. Lane answered, 'Perfectly so.' Now followed
-a scene of disturbance from Hogarth's friend the Doctor, and what
-more affected Mr. Lane, a great appearance of disappointment in the
-painter, and truly with great reason. The Doctor told him he had
-hurt himself greatly by fixing the determination of the sale at so
-early an hour, when the people in that part of the town were hardly
-up. Hogarth, in a tone and manner that could not escape observation,
-said, 'Perhaps it may be so!' Mr. Lane, after a short pause, declared
-himself to be of the same opinion; adding, that the artist was
-very poorly rewarded for his labour, and if he thought it would
-be of service to him, would give him till three o'clock to find a
-better purchaser. Hogarth warmly accepted the offer, and expressed
-his acknowledgments for this kindness in the strongest terms. The
-proposal likewise received great encomiums from the Doctor, who
-proposed to make it public. This was peremptorily forbidden by Mr.
-Lane, whose concession in favour of our artist was remembered by him
-to the time of his death. About one o'clock, two hours sooner than
-the time appointed, Hogarth said he could no longer trespass on his
-generosity, but that if he was pleased with his purchase, he himself
-was abundantly so with the purchaser. He then desired Mr. Lane to
-promise that he would not dispose of the pictures without previously
-acquainting him of his intention, and that he would never permit any
-person, under pretence of cleaning, to meddle with them, as he always
-desired to take that office on himself. This promise was readily made
-by Mr. Lane, who has been tempted more than once by Mr. Hogarth to
-part with his bargain at a price to be named by himself. When Mr.
-Lane bought the pictures they were in Carlo Maratte frames, which
-cost the painter four guineas a-piece."
-
-On the death of Mr. Lane the six pictures became the property of his
-nephew Colonel Cawthorne, and were in the summer of 1792 put up by
-auction at Mr. Christie's, and the proprietor bought them in at nine
-hundred guineas.
-
-They were a short time afterwards purchased by Mr. Angerstein, at one
-thousand guineas, and are now in his very fine collection.
-
-If considered in the aggregate,--in conception, character, drawing,
-pencilling, and colouring,--it will not be easy, perhaps not
-possible, to find six pictures painted by any artist, in any age or
-country, in which such variety of superlative merit is united.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Since the publication of the first edition of these volumes, the
-following description of "Marriage à la Mode" was found among the
-papers of the late Mr. Lane of Hillingdon; and his family believe it
-to be Hogarth's Explanation, either copied from his own handwriting,
-or given verbally to Mr. Lane at the time he purchased the pictures.
-It is subjoined, that the reader may form his own judgment:--
-
-
-EXPLANATION
-
-OF THE PAINTINGS OF THE LATE MR. HOGARTH, CALLED
-
-MARRIAGE A LA MODE.
-
- "Where Titles deign with Cits to have and hold,
- And change rich blood for more substantial gold;
- And honour'd trade from interest turns aside,
- To hazard happiness for titled pride."--GARRICK.
-
-
-_The First Picture._
-
-"There is always a something wanting to make men happy: the great
-think themselves not sufficiently rich, and the rich believe
-themselves not enough distinguished. This is the case of the Alderman
-of London, and the motive which makes him covet for his daughter the
-alliance of a great lord; who, on his part, does not consent thereto
-but on condition of enriching his son;--and this is what the painter
-calls marriage _à la mode_.
-
-"These sort of marriages are truly but too common in England; and
-it is, moreover, not unfrequent to see them unhappy as they are
-ill chosen. The two figures of the Alderman and the Earl are in
-every respect so well characterized that they explain themselves.
-The Alderman, with an air of business, counts his money like a man
-used to this employment; and the Earl, full of his titles and the
-greatness of his birth, which he lets you see goes as high as William
-the Conqueror, is in an attitude which shows him full of pride; you
-think you hear him say _me_, _my_ arms, _my_ titles, _my_ family,
-_my_ ancestors: everything about him carries marks of distinction;
-his very crutches, the humbling consequence of his infirmities, are
-decked with an earl's coronet; these infirmities are introduced
-here as the usual consequence of that irregularity of living but
-too frequent among the great. The two persons who are betrothed, on
-their parts are by no means attentive to one another: the one looks
-at himself in the glass, is taking snuff, and thinking of nothing;
-the other is playing negligently with a ring, and seems to hear with
-indifference the conversation of a kind of a lawyer who attends the
-execution of the marriage articles. Another lawyer is exclaiming with
-admiration on the beauty of a building seen at a distance, and upon
-which the Earl has spent his whole fortune, and has not sufficient to
-finish the same. A number of idle footmen, who are about the court of
-this building, finish the representation of the ruinous pageantry in
-which the Earl is engaged."
-
-
-_The Second Picture._
-
-"That indifference between the parties which preceded marriage _à
-la mode_ has not been wanting to follow it. We unite ourselves by
-contract, and we live separately by inclination. Tired and fatigued
-one of another, such husbands and wives have nothing in common but a
-house, tiresome to the husband, and into which he enters as late as
-he can; and which would not be less tiresome to the lady, was it not
-sometimes the theatre of other pleasures, either in entertainments
-or routs. There is here represented a room where there has just been
-one of these routs, and the company just separated, as you see by the
-wax candles not yet extinguished. The clock shows you it is noon; and
-this anticipation of the night upon the day is not the slightest of
-those strokes which are intended to show the disorder which reigns in
-the house. Madam, who has just had her tea, is in an attitude which
-explains itself perhaps too much. Be that as it will, the painter's
-intention is to represent this lady neglected by her husband, under
-dispositions which make a perfect contrast with the present situation
-of this husband, who is just come home, and who appears in a state
-of the most perfect indifference; fatigued, exhausted, and glutted
-with pleasure. This figure of the husband, by the novelty of its
-turn, the delicacy and truth of its expression, is most happily
-executed. A steward of an old stamp, one of those, if such there be,
-who are contented with their salary, seizes this moment, not being
-able to find another, to settle some accounts. The disorder which he
-perceives gives him a motion which expresses his chagrin, and his
-fear for the speedy ruin of his master."
-
-
-_The Third Picture._
-
-"The bad conduct of the hero of the piece must be shown here; the
-painter for this purpose introduces him into the apartment of a
-quack, where he would not have been but for his debauchery. He makes
-him meet at the same time, at this quack's, one of those women
-who, being ruined themselves long since, make afterwards the ruin
-of others their occupation. A quarrel is supposed to have arisen
-between this woman and our hero, and the subject thereof appears
-to be the bad condition, in point of health, of a young girl, from
-a commerce with whom he had received an injury. This poor girl
-makes here a contrast, on account of her age, her fearfulness, her
-softness, with the character of the other woman, who appears a
-composition of rage, madness, and of all other crimes which usually
-accompany these abandoned women towards those of their own sex. The
-doctor and his apartment are objects thrown in by way of episode.
-Although heretofore only a barber, he is now, if you judge by the
-appearance he makes, not only a surgeon, but a naturalist, a chemist,
-a mechanic, a physician, and an apothecary; and to heighten the
-ridicule, you see he is a Frenchman. The painter, to finish this
-character according to his own idea, makes him the inventor of
-machines extremely complicated for the most simple operations; as,
-one to reduce a dislocated limb, and another to draw the cork out of
-a bottle."
-
-
-_The Fourth Picture._
-
-"This piece is amusing by the variety of characters therein
-represented. Let us begin with the principal; and this is Madam at
-her toilette: a French _valet de chambre_ is putting the finishing
-stroke to her dress. The painter supposes her returned from one
-of those auctions of old goods, pictures, and an hundred other
-things which are so common at London, and where numbers of people
-of condition are duped. It is there that, for emulation, and only
-not to give place to another in point of expense, a woman buys
-at a great price an ugly pagod, without taste, without worth, and
-which she has no sort of occasion for. It is there also that an
-opportunity is found of conversing, without scandal, with people
-whom you cannot see anywhere else. The things which you see on the
-floor are the valuable acquisitions our heroine has just made at
-one of those auctions. It is extremely fashionable at London, to
-have at your house one of those melodious animals which are brought
-from Italy at great expense; there appears one here, whose figure
-sufficiently distinguishes him to those who have once seen one of
-those unhappy victims of the rage of Italians for music. The woman
-there is charmed, almost to fainting, with the ravishing voice of
-this singer; but the rest of the company do not seem so sensible of
-it. The country gentleman, fatigued at a stag or a fox chase, is
-fallen asleep. You see there, with his hair in papers, one of those
-personages who pass their whole life in endeavouring to please, but
-without succeeding; and there, with a fan in his hand, you see one of
-those heretics in love, a disciple of Anacreon. You see likewise, on
-the couch, the lawyer who is introduced in the first picture, talking
-to the lady. He appears to have taken advantage of the indifference
-of the husband, and that his affairs are pretty far advanced since
-the first scene. He is proposing the masquerade to his mistress, who
-does not fail to accept of it. The next piece proceeds to present to
-you the frightful consequences of this step."
-
-
-_The Fifth Picture._
-
-"The houses of bagnio-keepers are yet at Paris what they were
-heretofore at London: but now the bath is but the accessory, the
-appendix of the bagnio-keepers of this country, and excepting two
-or three of their houses, the others have for the principal view of
-their establishment the reception of any couple, well or ill sorted,
-who are desirous of a chamber, or a bed, for an hour or a night.
-The price is fixed in each house: there are some where you pay five
-shillings, in others half a guinea: you enter both into one and the
-other at any time with a great deal of safety, and are received there
-with all the complaisance imaginable. Nothing is better furnished,
-more clean, and better conducted than these houses of debauchery. The
-masqueraders often make assignations at these places; and it is for
-such an assignation that our heroine has accepted of the ticket which
-her lover offers her in the former piece. A husband, whose wife goes
-to the masquerade without him, is not without his inquietudes; it is
-natural that ours here has secretly followed his wife thither, and
-from thence to the bagnio, where he finds her in bed with the lawyer.
-They fight;--the husband is mortally wounded: his wife, upon her
-knees, is making useless protestations of her remorse. The watchmen
-enter; and the lawyer, in his shirt, is getting out of the window."
-
-
-_The Sixth Picture._
-
-"We are now at the house of the Alderman. London Bridge, which is
-seen through the window, shows the quarter where the people of
-business live. The furniture of this house does not contribute to
-its ornament;--everything shows niggardliness; and the dinner, which
-is on the table, the highest frugality. You see the tobacco-pipes
-set by in the corner: this, too, is a mark of great economy. Some
-pictures you see, upon very low subjects, to give you to understand
-by this choice that persons who, like the Alderman, pass their whole
-life in thinking of nothing but enriching themselves, generally want
-taste and elegance. Besides, everything here is contrasted with
-what you saw at the Earl's: the pride of one, and the sordidness
-of the other, are always equally ridiculous by the odd subjects of
-the pictures which are there seen; but generally in the choice of
-pictures, neither the analogy, taste, or agreement one with another
-are consulted. The broker only is advised with, who on his part
-consults only his own interest, of which he is much more capable of
-being a judge than he is of painting; like a seller of old books,
-who knows how to say, Here is an Elzevir Horace, or one of the
-Louvre edition,--and who knows all this without being acquainted with
-poetry, or capable of distinguishing an epigram from an epic poem.
-There is only one difference between a bookseller and a broker: the
-first has certain marks by which he knows the edition; and the other
-is obliged to have recourse to inspiration, which is the only way
-whereby he is able to judge infallibly, as he does, whether a picture
-is an original or no. But to return to our subject. The daughter of
-the Alderman, now a widow, is returned to her father. Her lover has
-been taken and hanged for the murder of her husband: this she has
-learned from the dying speech which is at her foot upon the floor. A
-conscience disturbed and tormented with remorse is very soon driven
-to despair. This woman, who by the consequence of her infidelity has
-destroyed her husband, her lover, her reputation, and her quiet,
-has nothing to lose but her life. This she does by taking laudanum.
-She dies. An old servant in tears makes her kiss her child, the
-melancholy production of an unfortunate marriage. The Alderman, more
-sensible of the least acquisition than of the most tragical events,
-takes, without emotion, a ring from the finger of his expiring
-daughter. The apothecary is severely reprimanding the ridiculous
-footman of the house who had procured the poison, the effects of
-which finish the catastrophe."
-
-Thus ends this explanation; and whether it was copied from what
-Hogarth wrote, or, as is more probable, made up from verbal remarks
-which he had made at different times, it does not in any material
-points differ from the following description of the plates, which
-was published some years before the editor saw or heard of the above
-paper.
-
-
-PLATE I.
-
- While the proud Earl of Rollo's royal race
- Points to the peers his pompous parchment grace;
- Builds all his honours on a noble name,
- And on his father's deeds depends for fame;
- The wary citizen, with heedful eye,
- Inspects what's settled on posterity;
- Pours out the pelf by rigid avarice pil'd,
- To gain an empty title for his child.
- In vain the pomp, in vain the gold,
- Love cannot thus be bought and sold;
- Such sordid motives he disdains,
- Nor can be bound in Mammon's chains.
- With cold contempt, disgust, and deadly hate,
- The new-made wife regards her tawdry mate;
- While he, Narcissus-like, with eager gaze,
- Eyes those fine features which his glass displays,
- In his own person centres all his pride,
- And as his bride loves him, he loves his bride.
- Like Satan, whispering in the ear of Eve
- (By nature form'd to ruin and deceive),
- A black-rob'd, smooth-tongued son of Belial see,
- That would betray his Saviour for a fee;
- With base, insidious smile, and tender air,
- Bend o'er the inexperienc'd, thoughtless fair,
- Assaying by his devilish art to reach
- The organs of her fancy, and to teach
- Pernicious, wicked tenets, that would taint
- The pure chaste virgin or the hallowed saint;
- Tenets of baneful, deadly, sinful dye,
- That lead to shame, remorse, and infamy.--E.
-
-It has been observed that woman, among savages, is a beast of burden;
-in the East, a piece of furniture; and in Europe, a spoiled child.
-Under the last denomination we may safely class the heroine of this
-history. She has all the pouting humours of a boarding-school girl.
-This alliance originated in her father wishing to aggrandize his
-family, and the sire of the Viscount wishing to clear his estate.
-These purposes answered, the two patriarchs troubled themselves
-no further. A similarity of disposition, or union of hearts, the
-nobleman considered as too vulgar an idea for a man of rank; and in
-the citizen's ledger of happiness there were no such items. Their
-dispositions are strongly marked by the different objects which
-engage their attention.
-
-The portly nobleman, with the conscious dignity of high birth,
-displays his genealogical tree, the root of which is "William Duke
-of Normandy, and conqueror of England." The valour of his great
-progenitor, and the various merits of the collateral branches which
-dignify his pedigree, he considers as united in his own person,
-and therefore looks upon an alliance with his son as the acme of
-honour, the apex of exaltation. While he is thus glorying in the
-dust of which his ancestors were once compounded, the prudent
-citizen, who in return for it has parted with dust of a much more
-weighty and useful description, paying no regard to this heraldic
-blazonry, devotes all his attention to the marriage settlement. The
-haughty and supercilious Peer is absorbed in the contemplation of
-his illustrious ancestry, while the worshipful Alderman, regardless
-of the past, and considering the present as merely preparatory for
-the future, calculates what provision there will be for a young
-family. Engrossed by their favourite reflections, neither of these
-sagacious personages regards the want of attachment in those who are
-to be united as worthy a moment's consideration. To do the Viscount
-justice, he seems equally indifferent; for though evidently in
-love--it is with himself. Gazing in the mirror with delight,[1] and
-in an affected style displaying his gold snuff-box and glittering
-ring, he is quite a husband _à la mode_. The lady, very well disposed
-to retaliate, plays with her wedding-ring, and repays this chilling
-coldness with sullen contempt; her heart is not worth the Viscount's
-attention, and she determines to bestow it on the first suitor. An
-insidious lawyer, like an evil spirit ever ready to move or second
-a temptation, appears at her right hand. That he is an eloquent
-pleader, is intimated by his name, Counsellor Silvertongue: that he
-can make the worse appear the better cause, is only saying in other
-words that _he is great in the profession_. To predict that with
-such an advocate her virtue is in danger, would not be sufficiently
-expressive. His captivating tones and insinuating manners would have
-ensnared Lucretia.
-
-Two dogs in a corner, coupled against their inclinations, are good
-emblems of the ceremony which is to pass.[2]
-
-The ceiling of this magnificent apartment is decorated with the
-story of Pharaoh and his host drowned in the Red Sea. The ocean
-on a ceiling proves a projector's taste,[3] and attention to the
-costume; the sublimity of a painter is exemplified in the hero
-delineated with one of the attributes of Jove. This fluttering figure
-is probably intended for one of the Peer's high-born ancestors, and
-is invested with the Golden Fleece and some other foreign orders.
-To give him still greater dignity, he is in the character of
-Jupiter; while one hand holds up an ample robe, the other grasps a
-thunderbolt. A comet is taking its rapid course over his head; and in
-one corner of the picture two of the family of Boreas are judiciously
-blowing contrary ways. To some such supernatural cause we must
-attribute the drapery and long peruke flying in opposite directions.
-Immediately before him a cannon is represented in the moment of
-explosion: to leave the spectator no doubt of its being intended for
-serious business, and not as a mere _feu-de-joie_, the ball is seen
-in its progress. All this is ridiculous enough, but not an iota more
-absurd than many of the French portraits which Hogarth evidently
-intended to burlesque by this parody.[4] Their painters have mistaken
-extravagance for spirit, and violence for freedom. Fine as are many
-of their engravings, they frequently give us lines that resemble
-the flourishes of a writing-master more than the free strokes of an
-artist.
-
-In the painting which represents Goliah slain by David, the gigantic
-Philistine is stretched on the earth, and, in truth, appears to
-cover many a rood. Beneath is the _merciful_ Judith: one hand grasps
-the sword with which she decollated Holofernes, and the other rests
-upon his bleeding head. The adjoining picture exhibits a view of St.
-Sebastian pierced with arrows, and that on the other side of the room
-displays Prometheus and the vulture; beneath is a representation of
-Cain slaying Abel. St. Lawrence upon the gridiron is placed under a
-painting of Herod's cruelty. As the ornament of a chandelier, over
-the sofa on which the hymeneal pair are seated, is a relievo of
-Medusa's head; both this and other _agreeable_ subjects may possibly
-have some covert allusions, but to me they are not obvious.
-
-Hogarth's leading object in them all seems to be a ridicule of
-those who gave these barbarous delineations a preference to his own
-paintings.
-
-The self-important consequence of the noble inhabitant of this
-mansion is displayed in every part of his furniture. The coronet
-glitters not only upon the canopy, but the crutches; is mounted upon
-the frame of the mirror, and marked on the side of the dog.
-
-Mr. Nichols observes, that "among such little circumstances as might
-escape the notice of a careless spectator, is the thief in the
-candle, emblematical of the mortgage on his lordship's estate."--As
-the mortgage is now paying, one thinks the thief might have been
-spared. The artist, however, might mean to intimate that his
-lordship's estate was run to waste by the negligence and carelessness
-of the proprietor. The same commentator properly remarks that the
-unfinished edifice seems at a stand for want of money, no workman
-appearing on the scaffolds, or near them; and adds, that a number of
-figures which are before the building were designed for "the lazy
-vermin of his lordship's hall, who, having nothing else to do, are
-sitting on the blocks of stone, or staring at the building."
-
-The characters in this print are admirably marked. Nothing can be
-better contrasted than the cautious, calculating countenance of the
-Alderman, and the haughty overbearing air of the Peer. To this may
-be added the stare of the Serjeant, astonished at so magnificent
-an edifice, and the cunning craft of the Usurer delivering up the
-mortgage.
-
-The plate was engraved by G. Scotin, and published April 1, 1745.
-
-
-PLATE II.
-
- Behold how Vice her votary rewards,
- After a night of folly, frolic, cards,
- The phantom pleasure flies,--and in its place
- Comes deep remorse and torturing disgrace,
- Corroding care, and self-accusing shame,
- A ruin'd fortune, and a blighted fame.--E.
-
-[Illustration: MARRIAGE A LA MODE. PLATE II.]
-
-Wearied, languid, and spiritless from the dissipations of the night,
-with his sword broken in a riotous frolic, the modish Viscount
-comes home at noon, and finds his lady just arisen, and seated _en
-déshabillé_ at her matin meal. From the melancholy cast of his
-countenance, and both hands being in his pockets, we may infer that
-he has been unsuccessful at the gaming-table. A cap and riband,
-which hang out of his coat pocket, lead us to suppose that part of
-his night has been passed in the company of a female; and from the
-attention a dog pays to the cap, we are led to suspect that he may
-have originally belonged to the lady who is its proprietor.
-
-The Viscountess[5] has been contemplating her face in a
-pocket-mirror, and is scarcely recovered from the fatigue of a rout,
-which by the cards, instruments, and music book on the floor, we
-conclude to have been the preceding night's amusement.[6]
-
-An ungartered servant, who is yawning in the background, pays little
-attention to his master or mistress, and is totally regardless of a
-chair, which is in great danger from the blaze of an expiring candle;
-this, with those left burning in the sockets since the conclusion
-of their nocturnal revelry, must give a pleasing perfume to the
-breakfast-room.
-
-The old steward's attitude and countenance clearly indicate that
-he foresees the gulf into which an united torrent of dissipation
-will inevitably plunge this infatuated pair. He has brought a great
-number of bills for payment: to one, and only one, is a receipt,
-which, being dated January 4, 1744, determines the time when vulgar
-tradesmen are extremely troublesome to men of rank.
-
-Of the paintings in this stately saloon, that of which we see only
-a part is properly concealed by a curtain. The four cartoons, very
-judiciously placed in the same line, are, I believe, intended for the
-four evangelists. Next to that which is opposite the chandelier is a
-faint representation of another picture. The lines are ambiguous, but
-seem intended to represent a ship in a storm: a very proper emblem of
-the wreck which is likely to succeed the negligence and dissipation
-of this noble family. A marble head, in a cut wig, perhaps intended
-for one of the Cæsars, with the nose broken, to show that it is a
-genuine antique, decorates the centre of the chimney-piece. In most
-of the other grotesque and fantastic ornaments,
-
- "Gay china's unsubstantial forms supply
- The place of beauty, strength, simplicity;
- Each varied colour of the brightest hue,
- The green, the red, the yellow, and the blue,
- In every part the dazzled eyes behold,
- Here streak'd with silver, there enrich'd with gold."
-
-A painting over the chimney-piece represents Cupid playing upon the
-bagpipes. Both subject and frame prove the classical taste of the
-proprietor. The ornaments round a clock are equally elegant and
-peculiarly appropriate. It is encompassed by a kind of grove, with a
-cat on the summit and a Chinese pagoda at the bottom. If the branches
-were tenanted by the feathered tribe, it would be no more than we see
-every day; it would be vulgar nature. To make it uncommonly grand,
-and peculiarly magnifique, they are occupied by two fishes.[7]
-
-The crowned chandelier, candlesticks, chairs, footstool,
-chimney-piece, and grate, are evidently made from the designs of
-William Kent.[8] To that fashionable architect they are indebted
-for the plan of the stupendous saloon, which has an air of grandeur
-and magnificence that is not often seen in Mr. Hogarth's works. It
-produces such a sensation as Pope describes on seeing Timon's villa,
-"Where all cry out, what sums are thrown away!"
-
-This plate was engraved by Baron, but the old steward's face is, I
-think, marked by the burin of Hogarth.
-
-
-PLATE III.
-
- "To Galen's great descendant list,--oh list!
- Behold a surgeon, sage, anatomist,
- Mechanic, antiquarian, seer, collector,
- Physician, barber, bone-setter, dissector.
- The sextons, registers, and tombstones tell,
- By his prescriptions, what an army fell;
- Med'cines--by him compos'd will stop the breath,
- And every pill is fraught with certain death."[9]--E.
-
-[Illustration: MARRIAGE A LA MODE. PLATE III.]
-
-This has been said to be the most obscure delineation that Hogarth
-ever published: how far the short explanation copied from Mr. Lane's
-papers may contribute to sanction my previous description, I do not
-presume to judge. Hitherto there have certainly been many different
-opinions as to the meaning of this print, and Churchill is said to
-have asserted, that from its appearing so ambiguous to him, he once
-requested Hogarth to explain it, but that the artist, like many other
-commentators, left his subject as obscure as he found it. "From this
-circumstance," added the poet, "I am convinced he formed his tale
-upon the ideas of Hoadley, Garrick, Townley, or some other friend,
-and never perfectly comprehended what it meant."
-
-How it was possible for Hoadley, Garrick, and Townley, or any other
-friend, to furnish Hogarth with ideas to compose the third plate of
-an historical series, I cannot comprehend.
-
-I can suppose it possible that the artist might not choose to
-explain to Churchill what he himself thought obvious, and therefore
-declined giving him any explanation. I can suppose that, admirably
-as Hogarth told a story with his pencil, he might not be qualified
-to express his verbal meaning with equal accuracy, and therefore be
-misunderstood; but, above all, I can suppose it not only possible,
-but probable, that this bitter satirist, making the declaration
-_after_ the publication of "Wilkes' Portrait," "The Bruiser," and
-"The Times," might, from resentment to the artist, be provoked to
-give a poetical colouring to the story about the "Marriage à la Mode."
-
-I think it must be considered as a sort of episode, no further
-connected with the main subject than as it exhibits the consequences
-of an alliance entered into from sordid and unworthy motives. In
-the two preceding prints the hero and heroine of this tragedy show
-a fashionable indifference towards each other. On the part of
-the Viscount, we see no indication of any wish to conciliate the
-affections of his lady. Careless of her conduct, and negligent of
-her fame, he leaves her to superintend the musical dissipations
-of his house, and lays the scene of his own licentious amusements
-abroad. The female heart is naturally susceptible, and much
-influenced by first impressions. Formed for love, and gratefully
-attached by delicate attentions; but chilled by neglect, and frozen
-by coldness,--by contempt it is estranged, and by habitual and
-long-continued inconstancy sometimes lost.
-
-To show that our unfortunate victim to parental ambition has
-suffered this mortifying climax of provocation, the artist has made
-a digression, and exhibited her profligate husband attending a quack
-doctor. In the last plate he appears to have dissipated his fortune;
-in this he has injured his health. From the hour of marriage he has
-neglected the woman to whom he plighted his troth. Can we wonder at
-her conduct? By the Viscount she was despised; by the Counsellor
-adored. This insidious, insinuating villain, we may naturally suppose
-acquainted with every part of the nobleman's conduct, and artful
-enough to make a proper advantage of his knowledge. From such an
-agent the Countess would probably learn how her lord was connected:
-from his subtle suggestions, being aided by resentment, she is
-tempted to think that these accumulated insults have dissolved the
-marriage vow, and given her a right to retaliate. Thus impelled,
-thus irritated, and attended by such an advocate, can we wonder
-that this fair unfortunate deserted from the standard of honour,
-and sought refuge in the camp of infamy? To her husband many of her
-errors must be attributed. She saw he despised her, and therefore
-hated him; found that he had bestowed his affections on another, and
-followed his example. To show the consequence of his unrestrained
-wanderings, the author, in this plate, exhibits his hero in the
-house of one of those needy empirics who play upon public credulity,
-and vend poisons under the name of drugs. This quack being family
-surgeon to the old procuress who stands at his right hand, formerly
-attended the young girl, and received his fee as having recovered
-his patient. That he was paid for what he did not perform, appears
-by the countenance of the enraged nobleman, who lifts up his cane
-in a threatening style, accompanying the action with a promise to
-bastinado both surgeon and procuress for having deceived him by a
-false bill of health. These menaces our natural son of Æsculapius
-treats with that careless nonchalance which shows that his ears are
-accustomed to such sounds; but the haggard high priestess of the
-temple of Venus,[10] tenacious of her good name, and tremblingly
-alive to any aspersion which may tend to injure her professional
-reputation, unclasps her knife, determined to wash out this foul
-stain upon her honour with the blood of her accuser.
-
-The nick-nackitory collection that forms this motley museum is
-exactly described by Doctor Garth; one would almost think Hogarth
-made the dispensary his model in designing the print.
-
- "Here mummies lie, most reverently stale,
- And there, the tortoise hung her coat of mail:
- Not far from some huge shark's devouring head,
- The flying fish their finny pinions spread;
- Aloft, in rows, large poppy-heads were strung,
- And near, a scaly alligator hung:
- In this place, drugs in musty heaps decay'd,
- In that, dry'd bladders and drawn teeth were laid."
-
-An horn of the sea unicorn is so placed as to give the idea of a
-barber's pole; this, with the pewter basin and broken comb, clearly
-indicate the former profession of our mock doctor. The high-crowned
-hat and antique spur, which might once have been the property of
-Butler's redoubted knight, the valiant Hudibras, with a model of
-the gallows, and sundry nondescript rarities, show us that this
-great man, if not already a member of the Antiquarian Society, is
-qualifying himself to be a candidate. The dried body[11] in the
-glass-case, placed between a skeleton and the sage's wig-block,
-form a trio that might serve as the symbol of a consultation of
-physicians. A figure above the mummies seems at first sight to be
-decorated with a flowing periwig, but on a close inspection will be
-found intended for one of Sir John Mandeville's _anthropophagi_, a
-sort of men "whose heads do grow beneath their shoulders." Even the
-skulls have character; and the principal mummy has so majestic an
-aspect, that one is almost tempted to believe it the mighty Cheops,
-king of Egypt, whose body was certainly to be known, being the only
-one entombed in the large pyramid.[12]
-
-By two machines, constructed upon the most complicated principles,
-though intended for performing very simple operations, we discover
-that our quack studies mechanics. On one of them lies a folio
-treatise descriptive of their uses; by which we are informed that the
-largest is to reduce a dislocated limb, the smallest is to draw a
-cork!--each of them invented by Monsieur De la Pilulæ, and inspected
-and approved by the Royal Academy of Paris.
-
-
-PLATE IV.
-
- The new-made Countess treads enchanted ground,
- And madly whirls in pleasure's airy round;
- From Circe's cup delicious poison quaffs,
- And, drunk with pomp, at cold discretion laughs.
- While the soft warbling of a senseless song,
- Pour'd from a neutral nothing,[13] charms the throng;
- To love's fond tale the fair her ear inclines,
- To Satan's agent all her soul resigns.
- Beware his soft insidious smiles,
- Fly from his glance, and shun his wiles;
- Avoid the serpent's poisonous breath,
- 'Tis fraught with infamy and death.--E.
-
-[Illustration: MARRIAGE A LA MODE. PLATE IV.]
-
-By the old Peer's death our fair heroine has attained the summit of
-her wishes, and become a Countess. Intoxicated by this elevation,
-and vain of her new dignity, she ranges through the whole circle
-of frivolous amusements, and treads every maze of fashionable
-dissipation. Her excesses are rendered still more criminal by the
-consequent neglect of domestic duties; for, by the coral on the
-back of her chair, we are led to suppose that she is a mother. Her
-morning levee is crowded with persons of rank, and attended by her
-paramour, and that contemptible shadow of man, an Italian singer,
-with whose dulcet notes two of our right honourable group seem in
-the highest degree enraptured. This bloated animal, carelessly and
-consequentially leaning back in his chair, is dressed in a richly
-embroidered coat, and every finger is loaded with a diamond. Though
-in a morning, his solitaire, kneebands, and shoes are decorated with
-gems.[14] He is quavering,
-
- "The seeming echo of what once was song,
- Sweet by defect, and impotently strong."
-
-That our extravagant Countess purchased the pipe of this expensive
-exotic in mere compliance to the fashion of the day, without any real
-taste for his mellifluous warblings, is intimated by the absorbed
-attention which she pays to the Advocate, who, with the luxuriant
-indolent grace of an Eastern effendi, is lolling on a sofa at her
-right hand. By his pointing to the folding screen, on which is
-delineated a masquerade revel,[15] at the same time that he shows his
-infatuated _inamorato_ a ticket of admission, we see that they
-are making an assignation for the evening. The fatal consequences of
-their unfortunate meeting is displayed in the two succeeding plates.
-A Swiss servant, who is dressing her hair, has all the grimace of his
-country; he is the complete Canton of the _Clandestine Marriage_.
-The contemptuous leer of a black footman, serving chocolate, is
-evidently directed to the singer, and forms an admirable contrast to
-the die-away lady seated before him,[16] who, lost to every sense but
-that of hearing, is exalted to the third heaven by the enchanting
-song of this pampered Italian. On the country gentleman,[17] with a
-whip in his hand, it has quite a different effect; with the echoing
-"Tally ho!" he would be exhilarated; by the soft sounds of Italia,
-his soul is lulled to rest. The _fine feeling_ creature, with a fan
-suspended from _its_ wrist, is marked with that foolish face of
-praise which understands nothing, but admires everything that it is
-the _ton_ to admire! The taper supporters of Monsieur _en papillote_
-are admirably opposed to the lumbering pedestals of our mummy of
-music. The figure behind him[18] blows a flute with every muscle of
-his face. A little black boy in the opposite corner, examining a
-collection of grotesque china ornaments which have been purchased
-at the sale of Esquire Timothy Babyhouse, pays great attention to
-a figure of Acteon, and with a very significant leer points to his
-horns. Under a delineation of Jupiter and Leda, on a china dish, is
-written, "Julio Romano!" The fantastic group of hydras, gorgons, and
-chimeras dire, which lie near it, are an admirable specimen of the
-absurd and shapeless monsters which disgraced our drawing-rooms until
-the introduction of Etrurian ornaments. By the fantastic decorations
-upon a chimney-piece in the second plate, we saw that our fashionable
-pair had a taste, and this taste may have been one source of their
-embarrassments. Another of their follies which, when gaming is united
-to it, will level their lofty forests and lay their proudest mansions
-in the dust, is displayed in the cards of invitation scattered on
-the floor. They afford a good specimen of polite literature, and the
-writers deserve a niche in the catalogue of royal and noble authors.
-The list follows:--
-
-"Count Basset desire to no how Lady Squander sleep last nite."
-
-"Lord Squander's company is desired at Lady Townley's drum. Monday
-next."
-
-"Lady Squander's company is desired at Miss Hairbrain's rout."
-
-"Lady Squander's company is desired at Lady Heathen's drum-major.
-Sunday next."
-
-The pictures in this dressing-room are well suited to the profligate
-proprietor, and may be further intended as a burlesque on the
-strange and grossly indelicate subjects so frequently painted by
-ancient masters: Lot and his daughters; Ganymede and the Eagle;[19]
-Jupiter and Io; and a portrait of the young Lawyer, who is the
-favourite--the _cicisbeo_--or more properly, the seducer of the
-Countess.
-
-This print was engraved by Ravenet, who has preserved the characters.
-
-
-PLATE V.
-
- Her dream of dissipation o'er,
- The bubble pleasure charms no more;
- The spell dissolv'd--broken the chain,
- Reason too late resumes her reign.--
- In vain the tear and contrite sigh,
- In vain the poignant agony.--
- Henceforth--thy portion is despair,
- Remorse, and deep corroding care;
- Misery!--to madness near allied,
- And ignominious suicide,
- Thy minion's meed, by law's decree,
- Is death--a death of infamy!--E.
-
-[Illustration: MARRIAGE A LA MODE. PLATE V.]
-
-Our exasperated Peer, suspecting his wife's infidelity, follows her
-in disguise to the masquerade, and from thence traces these two
-votaries of vice to a bagnio. Finding they are retired to a bedroom,
-he bursts open the door, and attacks the spoiler of his honour with
-a drawn sword. Too much irritated to be prudent, and too violent to
-be cautious, he thinks only of revenge; and, making a furious thrust
-at the Counsellor, neglects his own guard, and is mortally wounded.
-The miscreant who had basely destroyed his peace and deprived him of
-life is not bold enough to meet the consequences. Destitute of that
-courage which is the companion of virtue, and possessing no spark of
-that honour which ought to distinguish the gentleman; dreading the
-avenging hand of offended justice, he makes a mean and precipitate
-retreat. Leaving him to the fate which awaits him, let us return to
-the deluded Countess. Feeling some pangs from a recollection of her
-former conduct, some touches of shame at her detection, and a degree
-of horror at the fate of her husband, she kneels at his feet, and
-entreats forgiveness.
-
- "Some contrite tears she shed."
-
-There is reason to fear that they flow from regret at the detection
-rather than remorse for the crime; a woman vitiated in the vortex
-of dissipation is not likely to feel that ingenuous shame which
-accompanies a good mind torn by the consciousness of having deviated
-from the path of virtue.
-
-Alarmed at the noise occasioned by this fatal _rencontre_, the
-inmates of the brothel called a watchman: accompanied by a constable,
-this nocturnal guardian is ushered into the room by the master
-of the house, whose meagre and trembling figure is well opposed to
-the consequential magistrate of the night. The watchman's lantern we
-see over their heads, but the bearer knows his duty is to follow his
-superiors; conscious that though the front may be a post of honour,
-yet in a service of danger the rear is a station of safety.
-
-Immediately over the door is a picture of St. Luke; this venerable
-apostle being a painter, is so delineated that he seems looking at
-the scene now passing, and either making a sketch or a record of the
-transaction. On the hangings is a lively representation of Solomon's
-wise judgment.[20] The countenance of the sapient monarch is not
-sagacious, but his attitude is in an eminent degree dignified,
-and his air commanding and regal. He really looks like a tyrant in
-old tapestry; and the arm of a chair is ornamented by a carving
-fraught with that terrific grace peculiar to the ancient masters. We
-cannot say that the Hebrew women who attend for judgment are either
-comely or fair to look upon. Were not the scene laid in Jerusalem,
-they might pass for two of the silver-toned Naiades of our own
-Billingsgate.
-
- The grisly guards, with faces all awry,
- Like Herod's hang-dogs in old tapestry:
- Each man an Askapart, with strength to toss
- For quoits, both Temple-bar and Charing-cross.
-
-The grisly guards have a most rueful and tremendous appearance. The
-attractive portrait of a Drury Lane Diana,[21] with a butcher's
-steel in one hand and a squirrel perched on the other, is hung in
-such a situation that the Herculean pedestals of a Jewish soldier may
-be supposed to be a delineation of her legs continued below the frame.
-
-Our Counsellor's mask lies on the floor, and grins horribly, as if
-conscious of the fatal catastrophe. Dominoes, shoes, etc., scattered
-around the room, show the negligence of the ill-fated Countess,
-unattended by her _femme de chambre_. From a faggot and the shadow of
-a pair of tongs, we may infer that there is a fire in the room.[22] A
-bill near them implies that this elegant apartment is at the Turk's
-Head bagnio.
-
-The dying agony of the Earl (whose face is evidently retouched
-by Hogarth), the eager entreaty of the Countess, the terror of
-mine host, and the vulgar inflected dignity of Mr. Constable, are
-admirably discriminated.
-
-I have stated in the former editions that the background of this
-plate was engraved by Ravenet's wife, but am since informed by Mr.
-Charles Grignion, the engraver, that this is a mistake. See vol. iii.
-of this work.
-
-
-PLATE VI.
-
- Forlorn, degraded, and distrest,
- The furies tear her tortur'd breast.
- Remorse, with agonizing sigh,
- And sullen shame with downcast eye;
- Anguish,--by cold reflection fed,
- And wan despair, and trembling dread,
- In guise terrific hover round,
- And ring the knell of thrilling sound.
- Scar'd Reason totters on her throne,
- And Hope is fled!--and Peace is gone.
- Shuddering at phantoms ever in her sight,
- Hating the garish sun, and trembling at the night;
- To poison,--sad resort! she frantic flies,
- And, self-destroy'd, the wretched Countess dies!--E.
-
-[Illustration: MARRIAGE A LA MODE. PLATE VI.]
-
-The last sad scene of our unfortunate heroine's life is in the house
-of her father, to which she had returned after her husband's death.
-The law could not consider her as the primary cause of his murder;
-but consciousness of her own guilt was more severe punishment than
-that could have inflicted. This, added to her father's reproaches,
-and the taunts of those who were once her friends, renders society
-hateful, and solitude insupportable. Wounded in every feeling,
-tortured in every nerve, and seeing no prospect of a period to her
-misery, she takes the horrid resolution of ending all her calamities
-by poison.
-
- "Dreadful deed, unbidden thus
- To rush into the presence of her Judge,
- And challenge vengeance. 'Tis said
- Unheard-of tortures are reserved
- For murderers of themselves. They herd together:
- The common damn'd shun their society,
- As fiends too foul for converse."
-
-Dreadful as is this resolve, she puts it in execution by bribing the
-servant of her father to procure her a dose of laudanum. Close to
-the vial, which lies on the floor, Hogarth has judiciously placed
-Counsellor Silvertongue's last dying speech, thus intimating that he
-also has suffered the punishment he justly merited.[23] The records
-of their fate being thus situated, seems to imply, that as they
-were united in vice, they are companions in the consequences. These
-two terrific and monitory testimonies are a kind of propitiatory
-sacrifice to the manes of her injured and murdered lord.
-
-Her avaricious father, seeing his daughter at the point of death,
-and knowing the value of her diamond ring, determined to secure
-this glittering gem from the depredations of the old nurse, coolly
-draws it from her finger. This little circumstance shows a prominent
-feature of his mind. Every sense of feeling absorbed in extreme
-avarice, he seems at this moment calculating how many carats the
-brilliants weigh.
-
-From a gown hung up near the clock we know him to be an alderman;
-and from his sleek appearance, we have some right to infer that
-he is constant in his attendance at city feasts, for so comely a
-countenance could never be supported by the scanty and meagre viands
-of his own table. His domestic care is intimated by the gaunt and
-hungry appearance of a dog, who, taking advantage of this general
-confusion, seizes the brawn's head.[24]
-
-A rickety child, heir to the complaints of its father, shows some
-tenderness for its expiring mother; and the grievous whine of an old
-nurse is most admirably described. These are the only two of the
-party who exhibit any marks of sorrow for the death of our wretched
-Countess. The smug apothecary, indeed, displays some symptoms of
-vexation at his patient dying before she has taken his julap, the
-label of which hangs out of his pocket. Her constitution, though
-impaired by grief, promised to have lasted long enough for him to
-have marked many additional dittos in his day-book. Pointing to the
-dying speech, he threatens the terrified footboy with a punishment
-similar to that of the Counsellor for having bought the laudanum. The
-fellow protests his innocence, and promises never more to be guilty
-of a like offence. The effects of fear on an ignorant rustic cannot
-be better delineated; nor is it easy to conceive a more ludicrous
-figure than this awkward retainer, dressed in an old full-trimmed
-coat, which in its better days had been the property of his master.
-By the physician retreating, we are led to conceive that, finding
-his patient had dared to quit the world in an irregular way, neither
-abiding by his prescriptions nor waiting for his permission, he cast
-an indignant frown on all present, and exclaimed in style heroic,
-
- "'Fellow, our hat!'--no more he deign'd to say,
- But stern as Ajax' spectre, stalk'd away."
-
-The leathern buckets immediately over the Doctor's head were,
-previous to the introduction of fire-engines, considered as proper
-furniture for a merchant's hall. Every ornament in his parlour is
-highly and exactly appropriate to the man. The style of his pictures,
-his clock, a cobweb over the window, repaired chair, nay, the very
-form of his hat, are characteristic. A silver cup upon the table, and
-jug on the floor, show us his style of living. The scantiness of his
-own table is well contrasted by the plenty exhibited in the picture
-over the old nurse's head, where iron pots, brass pans, cabbages,
-and lanterns, are indiscriminately huddled together, with no other
-meaning than to show how highly a Flemish artist could _finish_. The
-_attic_ delicacy of this patient and laborious school is displayed in
-the adjoining picture; and their humour, in that of a fellow wittily
-lighting his tobacco-pipe by the red nose of his companion.[25]
-The pipe and bottle placed under the day-book and ledger, and the
-whole crowned by a broken punch-bowl, intimate that this venerable
-gentleman united business with pleasure. The view through an open
-window marks the situation of our plodding merchant's house to be
-near London Bridge, and represents that absurd and ill-contrived
-structure in its original state, loaded with houses. A clock points
-the hour to be a little after eleven, which at this highly polished
-and refined period would be deemed an early hour for a citizen's
-breakfast; at that, it was his hour of dinner!
-
-Thus has our moral dramatist concluded his tragedy, and brought his
-heroine from dissipation and vice to misery and shame, terminating
-her existence by suicide!
-
-The drama of Shakspeare has been said to be the mirror of life, which
-to-day we see lighted up with gaiety, and to-morrow clouded with
-sorrow. Shakspeare had the power of exciting laughter or grief, not
-only in one mind, but in one composition. That Hogarth had the same
-power, and exerted it with the same disdain of the little cavils of
-little minds, is evinced in this series of prints; from the study
-of which, a peasant, who has never strayed beyond the precincts of
-his own cottage, may calculate the consequences of dissipation; and
-he who has lived secluded from society, may form an estimate of the
-value of riches and high birth when abused by prodigality or degraded
-by vice.
-
-In the year 1746 was published a coarse and vulgar poem, in doggerel
-verse, with the following title: "_Marriage à la Mode_, an humorous
-tale in six cantos, in Hudibrastic verse, being an Explanation of the
-six Prints lately published by the ingenious Mr. Hogarth. London,
-printed for Weaver Bickerton, in Temple Exchange Passage, Fleet
-Street. Price One Shilling."
-
-The _Clandestine Marriage_ is professedly formed upon the model of
-these prints.
-
-
-
-
-THE FOUR STAGES OF CRUELTY.
-
- "The poorest beetle that we tread upon,
- In corporal sufferance feels a pang as great
- As when a giant dies."
-
-
-This pathetic lesson of humanity is given by the poet of nature.
-Aiming at the same end by different means, our benevolent artist here
-steps forth as the instructor of youth, the friend to mercy, and
-advocate of the brute creation.
-
-In the prints before us, an obdurate boy begins his career of cruelty
-by tormenting animals; repeated acts of barbarity sear his heart, he
-commits a deliberate murder, and concludes in an ignominious death.
-These gradations are natural, I had almost said inevitable; and that
-parent who discovers the germ of barbarity in the mind of a child,
-and does not use every effort to exterminate the noxious weed, is an
-accessory to the evils which spring from its baneful growth. To check
-these malign propensities becomes more necessary from the general
-tendency of our amusements. Most of our rural and even infantine
-sports are savage and ferocious. They arise from the terror, misery,
-or death of helpless animals. A child in the nursery is taught to
-impale butterflies and cockchafers. The schoolboy's proud delight is
-clambering a tree
-
- "To rob the poor bird of its young."
-
-Grown a _gentle_ angler, he snares the scaly fry, and scatters leaden
-death among the feathered tenants of the air. Ripened to man, he
-becomes a mighty hunter, is enamoured of the chase, and crimsons his
-spurs in the sides of a generous courser, whose wind he breaks in the
-pursuit of an inoffensive deer or timid hare.
-
-Many of our town diversions have the same tendency. The bird, whose
-melodious warblings echo through the grove, is imprisoned in a
-sort of a _Bastille_, where, like an unplumed biped in a similar
-situation, it frequently perishes through anguish or want of food.
-The high-crested chanticleer, whose courage is innate, and only
-vanquished by death, is furnished with weapons of pointed steel,
-when, set in opposition to one of the same species, armed in a
-similar style, these two champions, for the diversion of the _humane_
-lords of the creation, lacerate each other until one or both of them
-are slain.
-
-The faithful dog, whose attachment and gratitude are exemplary, and
-worthy the imitation of man, when in the possession of a farmer, or
-country 'squire, is well fed, and has no great cause of complaint,
-except his ears and tail being lopped to _improve nature_, and
-having a rib now and then broken by a gentle spurn; but if the
-poor quadruped falls into the hands of a tanner, a surgeon, or an
-_experimental_ philosopher, of what avail are his good qualities?[26]
-
-The Abyssinian cruelties of our slaughter-houses[27] and kitchens[28]
-I do not wish to enumerate. The catalogue would fill a volume.
-Humanity demands that the brute creation should be protected by the
-Legislature.
-
-The Mosaic Law, to guard against tortures being inflicted on animals
-which were slaughtered for sustenance, ordained them to die by a
-highly polished and pointed instrument; if the bone was pierced, or
-the beast mangled, it was deemed unclean, and burnt.
-
-
-FIRST STAGE OF CRUELTY.
-
- "While various scenes of sportive woe
- The infant race employ;
- And tortur'd victims bleeding, show
- The tyrant in the boy.
-
- "Behold a youth of gentler heart!
- To spare the creature's pain,
- O take, he cries--take all my tart,
- But tears and tart are vain.
-
- "Learn from this fair example, you
- Who savage sports delight,
- How cruelty disgusts the view,
- While pity charms the sight."
-
-[Illustration: FIRST STAGE OF CRUELTY.]
-
-Let us suppose a disciple of Pythagoras to contemplate this print,
-how would it affect him? He would imagine it to represent a group
-of young barbarians qualifying themselves for executioners; would
-raise his voice to Heaven, and thank the God of mercy that he is not
-an inhabitant of such a country; would lament that these degenerate
-little beings should not have been informed that the animals on
-whom they are now inflicting such tortures, might, previous to
-transmigration, have been their fathers, brothers, friends.
-
-The delineation of such scenes must shock every feeling heart,
-and their enumeration disgust every humane mind. I hope, for the
-honour of our nature and our nation, that they are not so frequently
-practised as when these prints were published.
-
-The hero of this tragic tale is Tom Nero: by a badge upon his arm,
-we know him to be one of the boys of St. Giles' Charity School. The
-horrible business in which he is engaged was, I hope and believe,
-never realized in this or any other country. The thought is taken
-from Callot's "Temptation of St. Anthony." A youth of superior rank,
-shocked at such cruelty, offers his tart to redeem the dog from
-torture. This Hogarth intended for the portrait of an illustrious
-personage, then about thirteen years of age; the compliment was
-rather coarse, but well intended. A lad chalking on a wall the
-suspended figure, inscribed TOM NERO, prepares us for the future fate
-of this young tyrant, and shows by anticipation the reward of cruelty.
-
-Throwing at cocks might possibly have its origin in what some of our
-sagacious politicians call a natural enmity to France, which is thus
-_humanely_ exercised against the allegorical symbol of that nation.
-A boy tying a bone to the tail of his dog, while the kind-hearted
-animal licks his hand, must have a most diabolical disposition.[29]
-Two little imps are burning out the eyes of a bird with a
-knitting-needle. A group of embryotic Domitians, who have tied two
-cats to the extremities of a rope and hung it over a lamp-iron, to
-see how _delightfully_ they will tear each other, are marked with
-grim delight. The link-boy is absolutely a Lilliputian fiend. The
-fellow encouraging a dog to worry a cat, and two animals of the same
-species thrown out of a garret window with bladders fastened to them,
-completes this mortifying prospect of youthful depravity.
-
-
-SECOND STAGE OF CRUELTY.
-
- "The generous steed in hoary age,
- Subdued by labour lies,
- And mourns a cruel master's rage,
- While nature strength denies.
-
- "The tender lamb, o'er-drove and faint,
- Amidst expiring throes,
- Bleats forth its innocent complaint,
- And dies beneath the blows.
-
- "Inhuman wretch! Say, whence proceeds
- This coward cruelty?
- What interest springs from barbarous deeds?
- What joy from misery?"
-
-
- If, as the Samian taught, the soul revives,
- And shifting seats, in other bodies lives,
- Severe shall be the brutal coachman's change,
- Doom'd in a hackney horse the town to range;
- Carmen, transform'd, the groaning load shall draw,
- Whom other tyrants with the lash shall awe!
-
-[Illustration: SECOND STAGE OF CRUELTY.]
-
-Tom Nero is now a hackney coachman, and displaying his disposition
-in his conduct to a horse. Worn out by ill-usage, and exhausted by
-fatigue, the poor animal has fallen down, overset the carriage, and
-broken his leg. The scene is laid at Thavie's Inn gate:[30] four
-brethren of the brawling bar, who have joined to pay threepence each
-for a ride to Westminster Hall, are in consequence of the accident
-overturned, and exhibited at the moment of creeping out of the
-carriage. These ludicrous periwig-pated personages were probably
-intended as portraits of advocates eminent in their day; their names
-I am not able to record.
-
-A man taking the number of the coach is marked with traits of
-benevolence, which separate him from the savage ferocity of Nero or
-the guilty terror of these affrighted lawyers.
-
-As a further exemplification of extreme barbarity, a drover is
-beating an expiring lamb with a large club. The wheels of a dray
-pass over an unfortunate boy, while the drayman, regardless of
-consequences, sleeps on the shafts.[31]
-
-In the background is a poor overladen ass: the master, presuming on
-the strength of this patient and ill-treated animal, has mounted
-upon his back, and taken a loaded porter behind him. An over-driven
-bull, followed by a crowd of heroic spirits, has tossed a boy.[32]
-Two bills pasted on the wall advertise cock-fighting and Broughton's
-Amphitheatre[33] for boxing, as further specimens of national
-civilisation.
-
-Parts of this print may at first sight appear rather overcharged,
-but some recent examples convince us that they are not so. In the
-year 1790, a fellow was convicted of lacerating and tearing out the
-tongue of a horse; but there being no evidence of his bearing any
-malice towards the proprietor, or doing it with a view of injuring
-_him_, this diabolical wretch, not having violated any then existing
-statute, was discharged without punishment.
-
-
-CRUELTY IN PERFECTION.
-
- "To lawless love, when once betray'd,
- Soon crime to crime succeeds;
- At length beguil'd to theft, the maid
- By her beguiler bleeds.
-
- "Yet learn, seducing men, not night,
- With all its sable cloud,
- Can screen the guilty deed from sight:
- Foul murder cries aloud!
-
- "The gaping wounds, the blood-stain'd steel,
- Now shock his trembling soul;
- But ah! what pangs his breast must feel
- When death his knell shall toll!"
-
-[Illustration: CRUELTY IN PERFECTION.]
-
-
-An early indulged habit of wanton cruelty strengthens by time,
-chokes every good disposition, corrupts the mind, and sears the
-heart. We cannot say to the malevolent passions,
-
- "Thus far shall ye go, and no further."
-
-The hero of this print began by torturing a helpless dog; he then
-beat out the eye of an unoffending horse; and now, under the
-influence of that malignant rancorous spirit, which by indulgence
-is become natural, he commits murder--most foul and aggravated
-murder!--for this poor deluded girl is pregnant by the wretch who
-deprives her of life. He tempts her to quit a happy situation; to
-plunder an indulgent mistress, and meet him with the produce of her
-robbery. Blinded by affection, she keeps the fatal appointment, and
-comes loaded with plate. This remorseless villain, having previously
-determined to destroy her, and by that means cancel his promise of
-marriage, free himself from an expected encumbrance, and silence one
-whom compunction might at a future day induce to confess the crime
-and lead to his detection, puts her to death!
-
-This atrocious act must have been perpetrated with most savage
-barbarity, for the head is nearly severed, and the wrist cut almost
-through. Her cries are heard by the servants of a neighbouring house,
-who run to her assistance. 'Tis too late. The horrid deed is done!
-The ethereal spirit is forced from its earthly mansion,
-
- "Unhousell'd, unappointed, unaneal'd!"
-
-but the murderer, appalled by conscious guilt, and rendered
-motionless by terror, cannot fly. He is seized without resistance,
-and consigned to that punishment which so aggravated a violation of
-the laws of nature and his country demand.
-
-The glimpses of the moon, the screech-owl and bat hovering in the
-air, the mangled corpse, and above all, the murderer's ghastly and
-guilty countenance, give terrific horror to this awful scene.[34]
-
-By the pistol in his pocket and watches on the ground, we have
-reason to infer that this callous wretch has been committing other
-depredations in the earlier part of the evening. The time is what has
-been emphatically called "the witching hour!"--the iron tongue of
-midnight has told ONE!
-
-The letter found in his pocket gives a history of the transaction; it
-appears to be dictated by the warmest affection, and written by the
-woman he has just murdered, previous to her elopement:--
-
- "DEAR TOMMY,--My mistress has been the best of women to me, and
- my conscience flies in my face as often as I think of wronging
- her; yet I am resolved to venture body and soul to do as you
- would have me; so do not fail to meet me as you said you would,
- for I shall bring along with me all the things I can lay my hands
- on. So no more at present; but I remain yours till death.
-
- "ANN GILL."
-
-This is the simple effusion of a too credulous heart; whatever would
-lessen the solemnity of the scene is carefully avoided; neither bad
-spelling, nor any other ridiculous circumstances that might create
-laughter are introduced.
-
-
-THE REWARD OF CRUELTY.
-
- "Behold, the villain's dire disgrace,
- Not death itself can end;
- He finds no peaceful burial-place,
- His breathless corpse--no friend.
-
- "Torn from the root that wicked tongue,
- Which daily swore and curst;
- Those eye-balls from their sockets wrung,
- That glow'd with lawless lust.
-
- "His heart exposed to prying eyes,
- To pity has no claim;
- But dreadful! from his bones shall rise
- His monument of shame."
-
-[Illustration: THE REWARD OF CRUELTY.]
-
-The savage and diabolical progress of cruelty is now ended, and the
-thread of life severed by the sword of justice. From the place
-of execution the murderer is brought to Surgeons' Hall, and now
-represented under the knife of a dissector. This venerable person, as
-well as his coadjutor, who scoops out the criminal's eye, and a young
-student scarifying the leg, seem to have just as much feeling as the
-subject now under their inspection.[35] A frequent contemplation
-of sanguinary scenes hardens the heart, deadens sensibility, and
-destroys every tender sensation.
-
-Our legislators, considering how unfit such men are to determine in
-cases of life and death, have judiciously excluded both surgeons and
-butchers from serving upon juries.
-
-Hogarth was most peculiarly accurate in those little markings which
-identify. The gunpowder initials T. N. on the arm, denote this to
-be the body of Thomas Nero. The face being impressed with horror
-has been objected to. It must be acknowledged that this is rather
-"o'er-stepping the modesty of nature;" but he so rarely deviates from
-her laws, that a little poetical licence may be forgiven where it
-produces humour or heightens character.
-
-The skeletons on each side of the print are inscribed "James
-Field" (an eminent pugilist), and "Maclean" (a notorious robber).
-Both of these worthies died by a rope. They are pointing to
-the physician's crest which is carved on the upper part of the
-president's[36] chair, viz. a hand feeling a pulse; taking a guinea
-would have been more appropriate to the practice. The heads of
-these two heroes of the halter are turned so as to seem ridiculing
-the president, "Scoffing his state, and grinning at his pomp."
-Every countenance in this grisly band is marked with that medical
-importance which dignifies the professors. Some of them we discover
-to be "from Caledonia's bleak and barren clime."
-
-A fellow depositing the intestines in a pail, and a dog licking the
-murderer's heart, are disgusting and nauseous objects. The vessel
-where the skulls and bones bubble-bubble, gives some idea of the
-infernal caldron of Hecate.
-
-Of this print, and that preceding it, there are wooden blocks
-engraved upon a large scale, invented and published by "William
-Hogarth, Jan. 1, 1750; J. Bell, sculpt." They were executed by order
-of Mr. Hogarth, who wished to circulate the salutary examples they
-contain, by making the price low enough for a poor man's purse; but
-finding engraving on wood much more expensive than he had calculated,
-he altered his plan, and engraved them on copper.
-
-[Illustration: (end of chapter floral icon)]
-
-
-
-
-BEER STREET AND GIN LANE.
-
- "The nature and use of aliments maketh men either chaste or
- incontinent; either courageous or cowardly; either meek or
- quarrelsome: let those who deny these truths come to me; let them
- follow my counsel in eating and drinking, and I promise them they
- will find great helps thereupon towards moral philosophy. They
- will acquire more prudence, more diligence, more memory."--GALEN.
-
-
-Fully impressed with the truth of this axiom, Mr. Hogarth engraved
-the two following prints, in which he has considered porter as
-the liquor natural to an English constitution; and that villanous
-distillation, gin, as pernicious and poisonous. While that noble
-beverage properly termed British Burgundy[37] refreshes the weary,
-exhilarates the faint, and cheers the depressed, an infernal
-compound of juniper and fiery spirits debases the mind, destroys the
-constitution, and brings its thirsty votaries to an untimely grave.
-
-These, as well as the four preceding prints, are calculated for the
-lower orders of society, and exhibit such a contrast as must strike
-the most careless observer. In the first, we see healthy and happy
-beings inhaling copious draughts of a liquor which seems perfectly
-congenial to their mental and corporeal powers; in the second, a
-group of emaciated wretches who, by swallowing liquid fire, have
-consumed both.
-
-
-BEER STREET.
-
- "Beer, happy product of our isle,
- Can sinewy strength impart;
- And wearied with fatigue and toil,
- Can cheer each manly heart.
-
- "Labour and art, upheld by thee,
- Successfully advance;
- We quaff the balmy juice with glee,
- And water leave to France.
-
- "Genius of health, thy grateful taste
- Rivals the cup of Jove;
- And warms each English, generous breast,
- With liberty and love."
-
-[Illustration: BEER STREET.]
-
-This admirable delineation is a picture of John Bull in his most
-happy moments. In the left corner, a butcher and a blacksmith are
-each of them grasping a foaming tankard of porter. By the _King's
-Speech_ and the _Daily Advertiser_ upon the table before them,
-they appear to have been studying politics, and settling the state
-of the nation. The blacksmith having just purchased a shoulder of
-mutton, is triumphantly waving it in the air. Next to him a drayman
-is whispering soft sentences of love to a servant-maid, round whose
-neck is one of his arms; in the other hand a pot of porter. Two
-fish-women, furnished with a flagon of the same liquor, are chaunting
-a song of Mr. Lockman's[38] on the British Herring Fishery. A porter
-having put a load of waste-paper[39] on the ground, is eagerly
-quaffing this best of barley wine.
-
-On the front of a house in ruins, is inscribed "Pinch, pawnbroker,"
-and through a hole in the door a boy delivers a full half-pint.
-In the background are two chairmen.[40] They have joined for
-threepenny-worth to recruit their spirits, and repair the fatigue
-they have undergone in _trotting between two poles_ with a ponderous
-load of female frailty. Two paviors are washing away their cares
-with a heart-cheering cup. In a garret window a trio of sailors are
-employed in the same way; and on a house-top are four bricklayers
-equally joyous. Each of these groups seem hale, happy, and well
-clothed; but the artist, who is painting a glass bottle from an
-original which hangs before him, is in a truly deplorable plight,
-at the same time that he carries in his countenance a perfect
-consciousness of his talents in this creative art.[41]
-
-
-GIN LANE.
-
- "Gin, cursed fiend! with fury fraught,
- Makes human race a prey;
- It enters by a deadly draught,
- And steals our life away.
-
- "Virtue and Truth, driv'n to despair,
- Its rage compels to fly;
- But cherishes with hellish care,
- Theft, murder, perjury.
-
- "Damn'd cup! that on the vitals preys,
- That liquid fire contains;
- Which madness to the heart conveys,
- And rolls it thro' the veins."
-
-[Illustration: GIN LANE.]
-
-From contemplating the health, happiness, and mirth flowing from
-a moderate use of a wholesome and natural beverage, we turn to
-this nauseous contrast, which displays human nature in its most
-degraded and disgusting state. The retailer of gin and ballads,[42]
-who sits upon the steps with a bottle in one hand and a glass in
-the other, is horribly fine. Having bartered away his waistcoat,
-shirt, and stockings, and drank until he is in a state of total
-insensibility; pale, wan, and emaciated, he is a perfect skeleton. A
-few steps higher is a debased counterpart of Lazarus, taking snuff;
-thoroughly intoxicated, and negligent of the infant at her breast,
-it falls over the rail into an area, and dies an innocent victim to
-the baneful vice of its depraved parent. Another of the fair sex
-has drank herself to sleep. As an emblem of her disposition being
-slothful, a snail is crawling from the wall to her arm. Close to her
-we discover one of the lords of the creation gnawing a bare bone,
-which a bull-dog, equally ravenous, endeavours to snatch from his
-mouth. A working carpenter is depositing his coat and saw with a
-pawnbroker. A tattered female offers her culinary utensils at the
-same shrine: among them we discover a tea-kettle pawned to procure
-money to purchase gin.[43] An old woman, having drank until she is
-unable to walk, is put into a wheel-barrow, and in that situation
-a lad solaces her with another glass. With the same poisonous and
-destructive compound, a mother in the corner drenches her child.
-Near her are two charity-girls of St. Giles', pledging each other
-in the same corroding compound. The scene is completed by a quarrel
-between two drunken mendicants, both of whom appear in the character
-of cripples. While one of them uses his crutch as a quarterstaff,
-the other with great goodwill aims a stool, on which he usually
-sat, at the head of his adversary. This, with a crowd waiting for
-their drams at a distiller's door, completes the catalogue of the
-_quick_. Of the _dead_ there are two, besides an unfortunate child
-whom a drunken madman has impaled upon a spit.[44] One a barber, who,
-having probably drank gin until he has lost his reason, has suspended
-himself by a rope in his own ruinous garret; the other a beautiful
-woman, whom by direction of the parish beadle two men are depositing
-in a shell. From her wasted and emaciated appearance, we may fairly
-infer she also fell a martyr to this destructive and poisonous
-liquid. On the side of her coffin is a child lamenting the loss of
-its parent.
-
-The large pewter measure hung over a cellar, on which is engraved
-"Gin Royal," was once a common sign; the inscription on this cave of
-despair, "Drunk for a penny, dead drunk for twopence, clean straw
-for nothing," is worthy observation; it exhibits the state of our
-metropolis at that period.
-
-The scene of this horrible devastation is laid in a place which was a
-few years since properly enough called the Ruins of St. Giles'.[45]
-Except the pawnbroker's, distiller's, and undertaker's, the houses
-are literally ruins! These doorkeepers to Famine, Disease, and Death,
-living by the calamities of others, are in a flourishing state.[46]
-
-Mr. Hogarth seems to have received the first idea of these two prints
-from a pair by Peter Breughel (frequently called _Breughel d'enfer_),
-which exhibit a similar contrast. In the one entitled "La Grosse"
-are a number of comely and well-fed personages; in the other, which
-is baptized "La Maigre Cuisine," the characters are meagre and
-wasted: seated on a straw mat are a mother and child, which very much
-resemble the wretched female we see upon the steps in the print under
-consideration.
-
-To the perspective little attention is paid, but the characters are
-admirably discriminated. The emaciated retailer of gin is well drawn.
-The woman with a snuff-box has all the mawkish marks of debasement
-and drunkenness. The man gnawing a bone, a dog tearing it from him,
-and the pawnbroker, have countenances in an equal degree hungry and
-rapacious.
-
-A print entitled the "Gin Drinkers," which bears strong marks of
-being one of Hogarth's early productions, may perhaps have been the
-first thought on which this print was built.
-
-On the subject of these plates was published a catchpenny compilation
-from Reynolds' "God's Revenge against Murder," entitled "_A
-Dissertation on Mr. Hogarth's six prints--'Gin Lane,' 'Beer Street,'
-and the 'Four Stages of Cruelty.'_"
-
-
-
-
-PAUL BEFORE FELIX.
-
- _Designed and etched in the ridiculous manner of Rembrandt, by
- William Hogarth. Published according to the Act of Parliament,
- May 1, 1751._
-
- "Each hero is a pillar of darkness, and the sword a beam of
- fire."[47]--FINGAL, Book I. p. 21.
-
-[Illustration: PAUL BEFORE FELIX.]
-
-
-For the etchings of Rembrandt, and a herd of servile imitators who,
-without any of his genius, copied his defects, Hogarth had the most
-sovereign contempt. He considered their productions as unmeaning
-scratches, as dingy and violent combinations of light and darkness,
-which would not bear to be tried by the criterion of either nature
-or art. How far he was right in his opinion is not my inquiry; but
-certain it is, that at the time of this publication they had the
-sanction of those who were deemed good judges, and produced most
-enormous prices. To correct this vitiated taste, and bring men back
-to reason and common sense, our whimsical artist etched this very
-grotesque print.
-
-The Apostle, conformable to the general practice of the Flemish
-school, is represented as a mean and vulgar character. Among the
-Lilliputians he might have been a giant; among the Romans he must
-have been a dwarf. In the true spirit of Dutch allegory, a figure
-fat enough for a burgomaster, invested with wings "that clad each
-shoulder broad," is seated on the floor behind him as a guardian
-angel. At this unpropitious moment the guardian angel is asleep, and
-a little imp of darkness,[48] ever active in mischief, is busily
-employed with a hand-saw cutting through the leg of the Apostle's
-stool, which falling, must inevitably bring the orator to the ground,
-where he will probably be seized by the snarling dog on whose collar
-is engraved "Felix," and who seems to have an eye to the saint,
-though his nose is evidently pointed at his appalled master. Seated
-in a wicker chair, with the Roman eagle over his head, and the fasces
-at his left hand, Felix indeed trembles. On an adjoining seat is the
-all-accomplished Drusilla and her lap-dog. Her olfactory nerves,
-as well as those of her companion, are violently affected. With a
-sacrificing knife in his right hand, his left clenched, and a
-countenance irritated almost to madness, the High Priest appears
-ready to leap from the bench and put the Apostle to death, but is
-prevented by a more prudent senator. The audience are worthy of the
-judges; male and female, young and old, are in dress, deportment,
-and feature, perfectly Dutch. Of the same school is the statue of
-Justice, with a bandage over one eye, and grasping, in the place of
-a flaming sword, a butcher's knife.[49] She stands in awful state,
-laden with bags of gold, the rewards of legal decisions.
-
-At a table beneath the bench are five curious characters. The first,
-maugre the thundering eloquence of St. Paul, is asleep; the next,
-mending a pen; two adjoining are highly offended with a noxious
-effluvia, while their bearded associate is grinning and pointing
-at the cause from which it emanates. Regardless of all other
-objects, an Hebrew counterpart of Shylock is expanding his hands in
-astonishment at the unguarded vehemence of the preacher. Not less
-exasperated is Tertullus, who, arrayed in the habit of an English
-serjeant-at-law,[50] has nothing Roman but his nose. Boiling with
-rage, and irritated almost to madness, he tears his brief: this,
-a devil, who to give him peculiar distinction has three horns, is
-carefully picking up and joining the remnants together.[51] The vase,
-and silver plates in a recess, the violent stream of light which
-dazzles the eyes of a priest _who stands with his back to it_, the
-boat, bark, and white sail glittering in the wave, and a village and
-windmill in the distance, are all of Rembrandt's school.
-
-The plate was originally intended as a receipt-ticket to the large
-"Paul before Felix," and "Pharaoh's Daughter;" and the artist stained
-many early impressions with that yellow tint which time gives to
-old prints. For the Paul, and Moses, he afterwards engraved another
-design, and presented this to any of his friends who requested
-it; but finding applications increase, he fixed the price at five
-shillings.[52]
-
-
-PLATE I.
-
- _Engraved by William Hogarth, from his original painting in
- Lincoln's-Inn Hall, and published as the Act directs, Feb. 5,
- 1752._
-
- "And as he reasoned of righteousness, temperance, and judgment to
- come, Felix trembled."
-
-[Illustration: PAUL PREACHING BEFORE FELIX.]
-
-This print Mr. Hogarth intended as a serious and sublime
-representation of the scene which he had so inimitably burlesqued;
-yet so little are we qualified to judge of our own powers, that he
-has here produced a print as destitute of elevation and sentiment as
-are the works of those masters he so successfully ridiculed. With
-the Roman eagle he could not soar, and has drawn the royal bird
-like a sparrow-hawk, nailed to the bottom of a writing-desk. The
-Apostle, with his right foot resting on a lower step than the left,
-has neither grace, dignity, nor firmness. Felix has the appearance
-of a vinegar-faced apothecary feeling the pulse of a nervous female
-patient, and shocked at the velocity of our circulation, dropping
-the prescription from his left hand. The haughty High Priest
-biting his nails, is deficient in everything except his drapery:
-the Jew immediately behind him bears a strong resemblance to an
-old-clothes-man. The standard-bearer, and woman with her hands
-closed, are a degree better; but the Herculean advocate, with a
-brief in his right hand, looks like a journeyman hatter that has
-drank porter till he is drowsy; by the strength of his muscles and
-the stupidity of his countenance, he seems better fitted for a
-bruiser than a pleader.
-
-The listening soldier, at the opposite corner, is meanly conceived
-and ill drawn.
-
-At the bottom of one of the copies I once saw the following
-memorandum in the handwriting of Hogarth: "A print of the plate that
-was set aside as insufficient. Engraved by W. H."
-
-
-PLATE II.
-
- _From the original painting in Lincoln's-Inn Hall, painted by Wm.
- Hogarth._
-
-[Illustration: PAUL PREACHING BEFORE FELIX.]
-
-This is engraved from the same design as the former, but the
-situation of the figures is reversed, and Drusilla omitted, it being
-thought that St. Paul's hand was rather improperly placed.
-
-It is somewhat superior to the former, but the light is ill
-distributed, and the characters too individual for the dignity of
-historical composition.
-
-Upon this and the following print Doctor Joseph Warton, in his _Essay
-on the Genius and Writings of Pope_, made the following remark.
-Trusting to his memory, he confounded two prints together, and
-remembering to have seen a dog snarling at a cat in the fourth
-print of "Industry and Idleness," from an error in recollection,
-transferred them to the "Paul before Felix:"--
-
-"Some nicer virtuosi have remarked, that in the serious pieces into
-which Hogarth has deviated from the natural bias of his genius
-there are some strokes of the ridiculous discernible, which suit
-not with the dignity of his subject. In his Preaching of St. Paul,
-a dog snarling at a cat; and in his Pharaoh's Daughter, the figure
-of the infant Moses, who expresses rather archness than timidity,
-are alleged as instances that this artist, unrivalled in his walk,
-could not resist the impulse of his imagination towards drollery.
-His picture, however, of Richard III. is pure and unmixed, without
-any ridiculous circumstances, and strongly impresses terror and
-amazement."
-
-On the publication of this criticism, Hogarth engraved the whole
-quotation under the two prints alluded to without any comment; but on
-the appearance of the following very ample and candid apology, erased
-them:--
-
-"The author gladly lays hold of the opportunity of this third edition
-of his work to confess a mistake he had committed with respect to
-two admirable paintings of Mr. Hogarth,--his Paul Preaching, and
-his Infant Moses,--which on a closer examination are not chargeable
-with the blemishes imputed to them. Justice obliges him to declare
-the high opinion he entertains of the abilities of this inimitable
-artist, who shines in so many different lights and on such very
-dissimilar subjects, and whose works have more of what the ancients
-called the ΗΘΟΣ in them than the compositions of any other modern.
-For the rest, the author begs leave to add, that he is so far from
-being ashamed of retracting his error, that he had rather appear a
-man of candour than the best critic that ever lived."
-
-Hogarth did not understand Greek, and was for some time doubtful
-whether the ΗΘΟΣ was meant as complimentary or satirical.
-
-If the original painting in Lincoln's-Inn Hall were destroyed,
-Hogarth's reputation would not be diminished.
-
-[Illustration: (end of chapter floral icon)]
-
-
-
-
-MOSES BEFORE PHARAOH'S DAUGHTER.
-
- "And the child grew, and she brought him unto Pharaoh's daughter,
- and he became her son. And she called his name Moses."--EXODUS
- II. 10.
-
-[Illustration: MOSES BEFORE PHARAOH'S DAUGHTER.]
-
-
-Among the many benevolent institutions which do honour to this
-nation, the hospital for maintaining exposed and deserted infants may
-be ranked as one of the most humane and political. Let the austere
-enthusiast censure it as an encouragement to vice, and the rigid
-moralist declaim against giving sanction to profligacy, it is still
-an useful and a benevolent foundation.
-
-To protect the helpless, give refuge to the innocent, and render that
-unoffending being a useful member of society whose parents may be too
-indigent to give it proper sustenance, or wicked enough to destroy
-it, is fulfilling one great precept of religion, and must afford a
-pure and exalted gratification to every philanthropic mind.[53]
-
-That it is found necessary to restrict the plan, and confine the
-charity in such narrow limits, is much to be lamented. Compassion and
-policy demand that the doors should be open to every proper object.
-
-To this asylum for deserted infancy Mr. Hogarth was one of the
-earliest benefactors,[54] and to their institution presented the
-picture from which this print is engraved; there is not perhaps in
-holy writ another story so exactly suitable to the avowed purpose
-of the foundation.
-
-The history of Moses being deserted by his mother, exposed among the
-bulrushes, and discovered and protected by the daughter of Pharaoh,
-is known to every one who has read the Bible: those who have not,
-may find it there recorded, with many other things well worthy their
-attention. At the point of time here taken, the child's mother,
-whom the Princess considers as merely its nurse, has brought him to
-his patroness, and is receiving from the treasurer the wages of her
-services. The little foundling naturally clings to his nurse, though
-invited to leave her by the daughter of a monarch. The eyes of an
-attendant, and a whispering Ethiopian, convey an oblique suspicion
-that the child has a nearer affinity to their mistress than she
-chooses to acknowledge.[55]
-
-Considered as a whole, this picture has a more historic air than we
-often find in the works of Hogarth. The royal Egyptian is graceful,
-and in some degree elevated.[56] The treasurer is marked with austere
-dignity, and the Jewess and child with nature. The scene is superb,
-and the distant prospect of pyramids, etc. highly picturesque and
-appropriate to the country. To exhibit this scene, the artist has
-placed the groups at such a distance as crowd the corners and leave
-the centre unoccupied. As the Greeks are said to have received the
-rudiments of art from Egypt, the line of beauty on the base of a
-pillar is properly introduced. A crocodile creeping from under the
-stately chair may be intended to mark the neighbourhood of the Nile,
-but is a poor and forced conceit.
-
-[Illustration: (end of chapter floral icon)]
-
-
-
-
-FOUR PRINTS OF AN ELECTION.
-
-
-I think it is Voltaire who observes that the English nation are
-mad every seven years: he might have added that there are local
-fits which seize some parts of the country at other times; but this
-madness, like the fermentation of liquors, proves the spirit of the
-people.
-
-In the following series of prints Mr. Hogarth has delineated the
-progress of this malady, in four of its most remarkable stages, with
-that broad and characteristic humour peculiar to himself. He has
-presented us with the mirror of a contested election, the British
-Saturnalia; in which is displayed what Abbé Raynal most emphatically
-calls "the majesty of the people!"--an expression, says the same
-writer, "which would alone consecrate a language."
-
-The first print was published February 24, 1755, and inscribed to the
-Right Hon. Henry Fox.--Plate II., February 20, 1757, to Sir Charles
-Hanbury Williams, Ambassador to the Court of Russia.--Plate III.,
-February 20, 1758, to the Hon. Sir Edward Walpole, Knight of the
-Bath.--Plate IV., January 1, 1759, to the Hon. George Hay, one of
-the Lords Commissioners of the Admiralty.
-
-The original pictures are now in the possession of Mrs. Garrick, at
-Hampton.
-
-It appears from the _Grub Street Journal_ of June 13, 1734, that
-the same subject had been previously attempted by another artist,
-under the title of "The Humours of a Country Election." It must be
-acknowledged that the inscriptions to some of the compartments have
-a striking similarity to the scenes represented by Hogarth. "The
-candidates very complaisant to a country clown," etc. "The candidates
-making an entertainment for the electors and their wives; at the
-upper end of the table the parson of the parish," etc.
-
-In 1759 was published, in four cantos, a poetical description of
-these prints, introduced by the following remarkable advertisement,
-dated
-
- "CHEAPSIDE, _March 1, 1759_.
-
- "For the satisfaction of the reader, and in justice to the
- concealed author, I take the liberty, with the permission of Mr.
- Hogarth, to insert in this manner that gentleman's opinion of the
- following cantos, which is--That the thoughts entirely coincide
- with his own; that there is a well-adapted vein of humour
- preserved through the whole; and that though some of his works
- have been formerly explained by other hands, yet none ever gave
- him so much satisfaction as the present performance.
-
- "JOHN SMITH."
-
-Had Mr. Hogarth's taste for poetry been in any degree equal to his
-skill in painting, he would scarcely have given so strong a sanction
-to this wretched attempt at Hudibrastic humour, which is coarse,
-dull, mean, and very unworthy of the scenes which it professes to
-celebrate.[57]
-
-
-PLATE I.
-
-AN ELECTION ENTERTAINMENT.
-
- "Here tumult wild and rude confusion reign,
- And hoodwink'd party heads the senseless train;
- Here meets her motley tribe--here holds her court,
- For pamper'd Gluttony, the grand resort.
- From orgies so profane--stern Freedom flown,
- Corruption mounts her abdicated throne.
- Unhappy Britain--thy degenerate tribe,
- Like Esau, barter birthright for a bribe."--E.
-
-[Illustration: THE ELECTION, PLATE I. THE ENTERTAINMENT.]
-
-The first act of this popular farce is very properly a dinner, which
-in all public transactions ought to precede every other business.[58]
-The scene is laid in a country town, at an inn, which in these piping
-times of peace is kept open for the friends of the Court candidate.
-All the party, except the divine and the mayor, have ended their
-repast; but episcopal dignity, or prætorian distinction, gives a
-right to more indulgence than is allowed to the unhallowed multitude.
-
-The highly polished and accomplished gentleman[59] who aspires to the
-honour of a seat in the British senate demands our first notice. He
-has what an Hibernian would call a face of much promise. His dress,
-air, and grace proclaim that he has travelled. Pope has described him
-exactly as if he had sat for the picture:
-
- "He saunter'd Europe round,
- And gathered every vice on Christian ground,
- Saw every court, heard every king declare
- His royal sense of operas, or the fair.--
- See now half-cured, and perfectly well-bred,
- With nothing but a solo in his head,
- As much estate, and principle, and wit,
- As Jansen, Fleetwood, Cibber, shall think fit;
- Stol'n from a duel, follow'd by a nun,
- And if a Borough choose him,--not undone," etc.
-
-At this time of general equality and universal levelling, when
-knight and vassal, esquire and mechanic, are of equal rank, our
-paragon of politeness is lending an attentive ear to a disgusting
-old beldam, who from her rotundity may be a descendant of Sir John
-Falstaff's. In her hand, which is behind him, she holds a letter
-directed to Sir Commodity Taxem; this we may naturally suppose
-contains either a request of a favour or an offer of a service, in
-the sure and certain hope of a return to it. Be that as it may, the
-gallant knight shows her every attention, and has stretched his long
-arm half round her ample waist:
-
- "Thus the bold eagle leaves his azure way,
- And takes the carrion carcase for his prey;
- There dips his beak--but when the banquet's done,
- Replumes his wings, and rises to the sun."
-
-While a little girl dazzled with the splendour of his brilliant
-ring attempts to make it a prize, a fellow who stands upon a chair
-behind him, with all that easy familiarity which the time warrants,
-strikes the Baronet's head against that of the old woman, and shakes
-the ashes out of his tobacco-pipe upon his powdered hair. This is
-election wit.
-
-The next group form a trio, and are made up by a grinning cobbler, a
-dirty-faced barber, and a mawkish gentleman, whose hand the son of
-St. Crispin grasps with an energy that almost cracks the bones. The
-barber, equally friendly, pinches his arm, and resting one hand upon
-his shoulder blows the hot fumes from a short tobacco-pipe into his
-eye. This also is election wit.
-
-A pyramidical group behind is composed of an officer, a drunken
-counsellor, and a pleasing young woman, over whose head the maudlin
-advocate, flourishing a bumper of wine, roars out an obscene toast.
-This is the third and most finished specimen of election wit. At
-a table a little beneath, stewing "the last lov'd remnant of the
-forest haunch," sits an oily divine,[60] holding his canonical
-periwig in his right hand, and wiping his forehead with the left.
-Behind him is a Scotch bagpiper, who, at the same time that he is
-pressing out his harsh and unmusical tones, enjoys the _royal_
-luxury of scratching.[61] A female player on the violin,[62] and a
-most consequential performer on the bass viol, when aided by the
-Caledonian pipe, must form a most melodious concert.
-
-A fourth votary of St. Cecilia holds his musical instrument under his
-arm, ceasing all dulcet sounds, while he drinks a glass of Burgundy
-with a gentleman who seems much gratified at seeing a chin of more
-extravagant length than his own. Adjoining are two country fellows
-delighted beyond measure at a person[63] making the representation
-of a face by wrapping a napkin round his hand, and singing, "An old
-woman clothed in grey," etc. This face, ingeniously designed with
-charcoal blots for eyes and mouth, bears a strong resemblance to the
-poor gouty old fellow on his left hand, whose violent contortions
-lead us to suspect that he feels some disagreeable internal emotion.
-Behind, is a fellow pouring the contents of a vessel through a
-window amongst a crowd made up of the opposite party, in return for a
-shower of stones they are hurling into the room. To annoy and repel
-these troublesome assailants, a man at the opposite corner throws out
-a three-legged stool. At the upper end of the table sits a gentleman
-in a tye-wig, whom we presume to be the Right Worshipful Mr. Mayor.
-He has ate oysters until his breath is stopped, and is now under
-the hands of a barber-surgeon. This village _Sangrado_ attempts to
-breathe a vein; "But ah! the purple tide no more will flow."
-
-Notwithstanding this suspension of vital powers, our absolute monarch
-of his own corporation, true to the cause, and actuated by his ruling
-passion, even in death, grasps a fork, on which he has impaled an
-oyster. Immediately behind him an electioneering agent offers a
-bribe to a puritanic tailor; but this conscientious wielder of the
-needle, lifting up his eyes with horror, refuses the money, maugre
-the terrific threats of his _amiable_ wife, who, while she raises her
-right fist in a menacing style, rests her left hand on the head of
-their barefooted boy.
-
-On an opposite chair is an unfortunate man of the law, who, intent on
-casting up the sure and doubtful votes, is, like the mighty Goliah,
-struck in the forehead with a stone, and falls prostrate to the
-floor. "Where be his quirks and quiddits now?"
-
-A champion of the same party, generally called a bludgeon-man,[64]
-having met with a similar accident in the cause of his country, is
-taken in hand by a patriotic butcher, who, assuming the office of
-surgeon, pours gin into the wound. A little boy filling a mashing-tub
-with punch,[65] and a trading Quaker reading a promissory note,
-conclude the catalogue. This note is from the candidate to Mr. Abel
-Squat for fifty pounds, payable six months after date, and probably
-offered in payment for ribands, gloves, etc., which are to be
-presented to the electors' wives and daughters. With this note honest
-Abel is much dissatisfied; and by the manner one hand is laid upon
-his little bale of goods, it does not seem probable that he will part
-with them for paper security.
-
-Coming in at the door we see a band of assailants from the opposite
-party, determined to attack the enemy in their entrenchments; most
-of them flourish their cudgels, but one of the heroes brandishes a
-sword. The stag's horns over the door may perhaps be intended to
-convey some allusion to the trembling Puritan. A party, whom their
-enemies at that time distinguished by the name of Jacobites, to
-show _their_ respect for Revolution principles, have mangled the
-portrait of King William the Third. The escutcheon with the Elector's
-arms, A CHEVRON SABLE BETWEEN THREE GUINEAS OR, with the crest of a
-gaping mouth, and motto "Speak and Have," is very applicable to a
-parliamentary canvas. The landscape over the candidate's head may,
-it has been observed, be intended as a representation of the town
-where this business is transacting. On the flag, which is entwined
-with laurels, is inscribed "Liberty and Loyalty," which cabalistic
-words, like the Abracadabra, are a sort of charm to the eyes of
-your Englishman. On another flag, which lies upon the ground, is
-written, "Give us our Eleven Days."[66] In the tobacco tray is a
-paper of Kirton's best,[67] and a slip from the Act against Bribery
-and Corruption is torn to light pipes with. A lobster appears to be
-creeping towards a mutton chop, which lies unheeded in a corner. A
-procession in the street are following an effigy,[68] on the breast
-of which is inscribed, "No Jews." The mottoes on their flags are
-equally curious: "Liberty and Property, and no Excise;" and, "Marry
-and Multiply, in spite of the devil."
-
-An inscription on the butcher's cockade is infinitely more classical
-and elegant: "Pro Patriæ" has a chance of general admiration, because
-it is not generally understood.
-
-As to the characters of the _dramatis personæ_. The face and air of
-the Baronet are perfectly of Lord Chesterfield's school; a fellow
-scattering ashes on his head, and the cobbler at the table, are
-marked with mischief. The fat old woman is of Mother Cole's family;
-and the divine has the corpulence and consequence of a bishop. He
-must "lard the lean earth as he walks along." The two country fellows
-looking with delighted eyes at Mr. Parnell, and an old man tortured
-by the gout, are admirably discriminated. The barber-surgeon and his
-brother butcher have so much _sang froid_, and display so little
-feeling for their suffering patients, that we naturally infer each
-of them is in great practice.
-
-Hogarth was fond of making experiments; and it has been said, that
-when engraving this plate he determined to attempt what no artist
-had ever performed, _i.e._ to finish the plate without taking a
-single proof during the process. The consequence was such as might
-be expected; he made some mistakes that it was scarcely possible
-to rectify, and on discovering the errors, violently exclaimed
-that he was ruined. On his passion subsiding, a brother engraver
-assisted him to correct the faults occasioned by trying to perform
-an impossibility. It is, however, the highest finished print he ever
-engraved.
-
-In the first state of the plate were some lemons and oranges lying
-on a paper by the side of the tub; but Hogarth being informed that
-vitriol and cream of tartar are the usual acids in election punch,
-erased them from the copper.
-
-
-PLATE II.
-
-CANVASSING FOR VOTES.
-
- "Although bare merit might in Rome appear
- The strongest plea for favour,--'tis not here;
- We form our judgment in another way,
- And he will best succeed who best can pay."
-
-[Illustration: THE ELECTION, PLATE II. CANVASSING FOR VOTES.]
-
-The centre group in this print represents a rustic freeholder between
-two innkeepers, each of whom, as agents for their respective parties,
-are dropping money into his hands. From the arch and significant
-cast of his eye, we see that though interest induces him to take
-all that either of them will give, _conscience_ obliges him to vote
-for the best paymaster.[69] One of the candidates, considering how
-necessary it is to conciliate the favour of the fair, is purchasing
-trinkets from a Jew pedlar for two ladies, who express their virtuous
-wishes in a balcony. Though neither of them have votes, their
-interest may be very extensive. By the direction upon a letter which
-a porter, in the hope of a more liberal gratuity, delivers with a
-bended knee, we perceive that this gentleman is of the numerous and
-ancient family of the party tools, who have flourished in this
-island ever since the Revolution. A packet on the ground consists of
-printed bills to be dispersed among the electors, intimating that
-Punch's theatre is opened,[70] the company of the worthy electors
-humbly[71] and earnestly requested, etc. etc. In election business,
-eating is a leading article; of this, two hungry countrymen in the
-Royal Oak larder seem perfectly sensible. One of them is voraciously
-devouring a fowl, and the other slashing away a round of beef.
-Seated upon an old stern of a ship, which is placed as a kind of
-national trophy at the inn door, and represents the British lion
-swallowing the lily of France, is the buxom landlady (at this time a
-very important personage), counting the money she has received for
-_her_ interest in the borough; a grenadier watches her with that
-kind of eagerness which seems to intimate a desire of dividing the
-spoil. Settling the nation while they drink their ale, a barber and
-a cobbler are engaged in a dispute upon politics at the door of the
-Portobello[72] alehouse. The former seems describing, with pieces
-of broken tobacco-pipes, the great exploits of Admiral Vernon with
-six ships only. In the progress of this voluble harangue he has
-advanced something contrary to the cobbler's creed, and Crispin,
-being no great orator, offers to back his opinion by a wager. This
-the eloquent flourisher of a razor is either unwilling or unable
-to answer, and the self-important mender of bad soles triumphantly
-sweeps his cash from the table to his pocket. A fellow mounted on
-a cross-beam at the end of the Crown signpost deserves particular
-notice. Eagerly exercising his hand-saw, he strains every nerve to
-cut through the beam, totally negligent of his own situation, and
-forgetting that when the Crown drops--he must fall. To accelerate
-this operation, and bring the business to a more speedy crisis, two
-zealous coadjutors are exerting all their strength in pulling at a
-rope which is tied round the beam. This is one of the neatest pieces
-of allegory that Hogarth has delineated.
-
-The crowd beneath are a fair representation of what we had occasion
-to notice before--the majesty of the people. Delighting in
-devastation, and blind to its consequences, they with one voice "cry
-havoc, and let slip the dogs of war." The landlord, enraged at this
-wanton attack upon his _castle_, opens his window and discharges a
-blunderbuss amongst the assailants. Painted on the upper part of a
-show-cloth, and hung before the sign of the Royal Oak,[73] is a view
-of the Treasury, out of which a stream of gold is poured into a bag,
-which, when filled, will be hoisted into a large waggon now loading
-with guineas to defray the expense of the approaching elections.
-Next to this is a view of that _solid_ specimen of Mr. Ware's taste
-and talents in architecture, the Horse Guards. To the cupola of this
-ponderous pile the artist has, with very little exaggeration, given
-the form of a beer barrel. In the centre arch the builder forgot
-proportion and neglected utility, so that the state coach could not
-pass through until the ground was lowered. To satirize this violation
-of the laws of Palladio, and inattention to the dictates of common
-sense, Hogarth has represented the royal carriage on the point of
-entering the arch, and the king's _body-coachman_ without a head.[74]
-Beneath is delineated that ancient favourite of a puppet-show, the
-facetious Mr. Punch, with a barrow full of guineas, which, with a
-wooden ladle, he tosses up and scatters in the air, to the great
-delight of two sylvan freeholders who attempt to catch them in their
-hats. One of these _simple_ swains,[75] having had his head broken
-with the gold, endeavours to guard his _caput_ from future mishaps.
-An old woman standing behind them with a magic wand, I suppose to
-be Mrs. Punch. Underneath is a very applicable inscription, "Punch,
-a candidate for Guzzledown." A view in the background, between
-the Crown and Portobello, of a cottage embosomed in a wood, and
-a village in the distance, is highly picturesque. The tree, which
-spreads its foliage before the walls of the Royal Oak, has one
-withered bough; and enveloped by the luxuriant branches of a vine,
-hangs a wooden bunch of grapes.
-
-The characters are admirable. Nothing can be superior to the haughty
-and oracular self-importance of the cobbler; the barber has all his
-professional volubility; and the leer of the countryman lets you into
-his whole soul. It is evidently directed to mine host of the Oak,[76]
-who, added to his superior weight of _metal_, has a superior weight
-of body, and a much more persuasive aspect. The Jew has the true
-countenance of his tribe. Of his customer, we may say in the language
-of Shylock,
-
- "How like a fawning publican he looks!"
-
-
-PLATE III.
-
-THE POLLING.
-
- "Time was,--our freeholders, a stout rustic band,
- Inhal'd the fresh breeze as they till'd their own land;
- Their hearts beam'd with honour, their faces with health,
- Their toil gave them strength, and their diligence wealth.
- But these sons of misery, disfranchis'd by fate,
- Resemble a group at an hospital gate,
- All huddled together in one little clan,
- To display the calamities common to man.
- Yet deaf, blind, or lame, we must trust to their choice;
- _Sans_ ears, eyes, or hands,--each may have a good voice.
- And--gasping for breath,--it deserves special note,
- The _expiring Elector_ is deem'd a _dead vote_."--E.
-
-[Illustration: THE ELECTION, PLATE III. THE POLLING.]
-
-With the glorious ambition of serving their country, added to an
-eagerness of displaying their own importance, the maimed, the lame,
-the blind, the deaf, and the sick, hasten to the hustings to give
-their _independent_ votes.[77] The contending candidates, seated at
-the back of the booth, anticipate the event. One of them, coolly
-resting upon his cane in a state of stupid satisfaction, appears to
-be as happy as his nature will admit, in the certainty of success.
-Very different are the feelings of his opponent, who, rubbing his
-head with every mark of apprehensive agitation, contemplates the
-state of the poll, and shudders at the heavy expense of a contest in
-which he is likely to be the loser. Such are the cares of a candidate.
-
- "A man, when once he's safely chose,
- May laugh at all his furious foes,
- Nor think of former evil:
- Yet good has its attendant ill,
- A seat is no bad thing,--but still,
- A contest is the Devil."
-
-The first person that tenders his oath to the swearing clerk is an
-old soldier, and probably a brave one, for he has lost a leg, an arm,
-and a hand, in the service of his country. They were severed by the
-sword of an enemy, but the trunk and heart remain entire, and are
-entitled to more respect than is paid them by the brawling advocate,
-who, with that loud and overbearing loquacity for which Billingsgate
-and the bar are so deservedly eminent, puts in a protest against his
-vote. The objection is not founded upon this heroic remnant of war
-having forfeited his franchise by any improper conduct, but upon
-the letter, the black letter of the law, "which," says our quibbling
-counsellor, "ordains, 'that the person who makes an affidavit shall
-lay his right hand upon the book.' Now, this man having had his
-right hand severed from his arm, and, as he informs us, left it in
-Flanders, cannot comply with the letter of the law, and therefore
-is not competent to make an affidavit; that being once admitted,
-which I do contend must be admitted, he cannot be deemed competent
-to vote." "That," replies another gentleman of the black robe, "I
-most pointedly deny; for though this valiant veteran, who is an
-half-pay officer, has lost much of his blood and three of his limbs
-in the service of his king, and defence of his fellow-subjects, yet
-the sword which deprived him of his hand has not deprived him of his
-birthright. God forbid it should! It might as well be argued and
-asserted, that this gentleman is excluded from the rites of matrimony
-because he cannot pledge his hand. Thanks to our religion and our
-constitution, neither law nor gospel holds such language, and it
-is beneath me to waste any more words in the confutation of it. I
-will only add,--and I do insist upon my opinion being confirmed by
-every statute upon the case,--that the law must and will consider
-this substitute for a hand to be as good as the hand itself; and
-his laying that upon the book is all which the law ought to
-require,--all the law can require,--all the law does require."
-
-Leaving these two bright luminaries of their profession to throw
-dust, and render that obscure which without their explanation would
-have been perfectly clear, let us attend to the son of Solomon, who
-is fastened in his chair and brought to give his voice for a fit
-person to represent _him_ in Parliament. This is evidently a deaf
-idiot, but he is attended by a man in fetters,[78] very capable of
-prompting him, who is at this moment roaring in his ear the name of
-the gentleman for whom he is to vote. Behind him are two fellows
-carrying a man wrapped in a blanket, apparently in so languid a
-state, that he cannot be supposed to feel much interest in the
-concerns of a world he is on the point of leaving.[79] The catalogue
-of this motley group of electors is concluded by a blind man and
-a cripple, who are slowly and cautiously ascending the steps that
-lead to the hustings. In the group an artist is drawing a profile of
-one of the candidates, and in both air and character this Sayers of
-his day has given a very striking resemblance of his original. The
-constable, fatigued by double duty, is at peace with all mankind--a
-deep sleep is upon him. Many of the crowd are attentively listening
-to the soft sounds of a female siren, warbling forth a brown paper
-libel on one of the candidates in that universal language which those
-that cannot read may yet understand,--the hero of this satire being
-delineated as suspended to a gibbet on the top of the ballad.
-
-In the sinister corner is a view of Britannia's chariot oversetting,
-while the coachman and footman are playing at cards on the box. Here
-is one of the few instances where Hogarth has mounted into the cloudy
-heights of allegory; and here, as Mr. Walpole justly observes, he is
-not happy: it is a dark and dangerous region, in which almost every
-aeronaut of the arts has lost himself, and confused his earth-born
-admirers. On a bridge in the background is a carriage, with
-colours flying, and a cavalcade composed of worthy and independent
-freeholders advancing to give their suffrages with all possible
-_éclat_.
-
-The village in the distance has a pretty effect. Of the church we may
-fairly say, as Charles the Second did of that at Harrow on the Hill,
-"It is the _visible_ church."
-
-Part of this plate was engraved by Morrilon le Cave, who was a
-scholar of Picart's. In the year 1733, he engraved from Hogarth's
-design a small print of Captain Coram, etc., as the headpiece to a
-power of attorney for the Governors of the Foundling Hospital: he
-also engraved a head of Doctor Pococke, which is the frontispiece to
-Twell's edition of the Doctor's works.
-
-
-PLATE IV.
-
-CHAIRING THE MEMBER.
-
- When Philip's warlike and victorious son
- A kingdom conquer'd or a battle won,
- His legions bow'd the head, and bent the knee,
- And cried, exulting,--Lo, a Deity!
- Bore him triumphant in a glittering car,
- While thundering plaudits rent the echoing air.
- So,--the Election being finish'd,
- His borough gain'd, his coin diminish'd,
- Our Knight in mock heroic state
- Is now exalted,--but not great.
- Beyond all doubt the people's choice,
- Ah!--could he check the people's voice?
- For some exclaim,--A venal knave!
- And others,--A time-serving slave!
- While this roars out,--A party tool!
- That, sneering cries,--A party fool!
- These are hard words, and grating tones;
- But what are words to broken bones?
- And broken bones he'll soon bewail,
- For there's no fence against a flail.
- Oh hapless wight!--ah, luckless fray,
- Down drops this pageant of the day.
- Thus, he most raised above his fellows,
- By one rude blast from Fortune's bellows,
- Falls, like a tempest-riven tower,
- From pomp, pride, circumstance, and power.--E.
-
-[Illustration: THE ELECTION, PLATE IV. CHAIRING THE MEMBERS.]
-
-The polling being concluded, the books cast up, and the
-returning-officer having declared our candidate[80] duly elected, he
-is now exhibited in triumph. Seated in an arm-chair, and exalted upon
-the shoulders of four tried supporters of the constitution, he is
-borne through the principal streets, which are promiscuously crowded
-with enemies as well as friends. In this aerostatic voyage there
-seems to be some danger of a wreck; for a thresher having received
-an insult from a sailor, in the act of revenging it flourishes his
-flail in as extensive an orbit as if he were in his own barn. The
-end of this destructive instrument coming in contact with the skull
-of a bearer of our new-made member, the fellow's head rings with
-the blow, his eyes swim, his limbs refuse their office, and at this
-inauspicious moment the effects of the stroke, like an electric
-shock, extend to the exalted senator. He trembles in every joint; the
-hat flies from his head--and--without the intervention of Juno or
-Minerva, he must fall from the seat of honour to the bed of stone.
-Terrified at his impending danger, a nervous lady, who with her
-attendants is in the churchyard, falls back in a swoon. Regardless
-of her distress, two little chimney-sweepers upon the gate-post are
-placing a pair of gingerbread spectacles on a death's head. Their
-sportive tricks are likely to be interrupted by a monkey beneath,
-who, arrayed _en militaire_, is mounted upon a bear's back. The
-firelock slung over this little animal's shoulder, in a fray between
-the bear and a biped, is accidentally discharged in a direction
-that, if loaded, must carry leaden death to one of the gibing soot
-merchants above.[81]
-
-The venerable musician, delighted with his own harmony, neither takes
-a part nor feels an interest in the business of the day. Let not his
-neutrality be attributed to a wrong cause; nor be it supposed that,
-in a country where every good citizen must espouse some party,[82]
-this ancient personage would remain an indifferent spectator were he
-not totally blind. At an opposite corner a naked soldier is taking
-a few refreshing grains of best Virginia, and preparing to dress
-himself after the performance of a pugilistic duet. On the other side
-of the rails a half-starved French cook, a half-bred English cook,
-and a half-roasted woman cook, are carrying three covers for the
-lawyers' table. Near them is a cooper inspecting a vessel that had
-been reported leaky, and must speedily be filled with home-brewed
-ale for the gratification of the populace. Two fellows are forcing
-their way through the crowd in the background with a barrel of
-the same liquor. Coming out of a street behind them, a procession
-of triumphant electors hail the other successful candidate, whose
-shadow appears on the wall of the court-house. In Mr. Attorney's[83]
-first floor are a group of the defeated party glorying in their
-security, and highly delighted with the confusion below. One of
-these, distinguished by a riband, is said to be intended for the
-late Duke of Newcastle, who was eminently active on these occasions.
-A poor old lady is unfortunately thrown down by a litter of pigs,
-which, followed by their _mamma_, rush through the crowd with as
-much impetuosity as if the whole herd were possessed. One of this
-agreeable party has leaped, not into the ocean, but the brook, and
-the whole family are on the point of following its example.
-
-Hogarth had surely some antipathy to tailors; in the background he
-has introduced one of these knights of the needle disciplined by his
-wife for having quitted the shop-board to look at the gentlemen.
-In Le Brun's "Battle of the Granicus," an eagle is represented as
-hovering over the plumed helmet of Alexander; this thought is very
-happily parodied in a goose,[84] flying immediately over the tye-wig
-of our exalted candidate.
-
-Mr. Nichols, in his _Anecdotes of Hogarth_, very shrewdly observes
-that "the ruined house adjoining to the attorney's is a stroke
-of satire that should not be overlooked, because," adds the same
-writer, "it intimates that nothing can thrive in the neighbourhood
-of such vermin."[85] In this inference I most sincerely join, but am
-afraid that in the present instance we cannot establish our data.
-The house is not in ruins from the inhabitant having been unable to
-keep it in repair, neither has it been torn by the teeth of time;
-for it is apparently the wreck of a modern edifice, which has been
-thus destroyed by a riotous mob, because it belonged to one of the
-opposite party.
-
-An inscription on the sun-dial, when joined to the mortuary
-representation on the church gate-post, has been supposed to imply
-a pun hardly worthy of Hogarth, but which yet I am inclined to
-suspect he intended. "We must,"[86] on the sun-dial, say some of his
-illustrators, means--We must die all (_dial_).
-
-All the incidents in this very whimsical plate are naturally and yet
-skilfully combined: the whole is in the highest degree laughable,
-and every figure stamped with its proper character. The apprehensive
-terror of the unwieldy member, the Herculean strength of the
-exasperated thresher, and the energetic attitude of the maimed
-sailor, deserve peculiar praise.
-
-Previous to the publication of this series, Mr. Hogarth's satire was
-generally aimed at the follies and vices of individuals. He has here
-ventured to dip his pencil in the ocean of politics, and delineated
-the corrupt and venal conduct of our electors in the choice of their
-representatives. That these four plates display a picture in any
-degree applicable to the present times must not be asserted, because
-it might, by the help of _innuendo_, be construed into a libel on
-the present upright and independent House of Commons: but from the
-floating memorials of some little transactions that took place some
-thirty or forty years ago, there is reason to think that the people
-of Great Britain were so far from being influenced by a reverence for
-public virtue, that they began to suspect it had no existence. Their
-faith in violent professions of the _amor patriæ_ had been staggered
-by several recent instances of political depravity. They had a few
-years before seen a William Pulteney, the champion of patriots, the
-idol of the people, the dread of ministers, desert from the party
-of which he was a leader, quit the cause for which he had been the
-most violent advocate, and accept a peerage. This, and some similar
-circumstances, gave an example and an apology for universal venality.
-
-How different was the spirit which actuated the Earl of Bath,
-from that independent dignity, that patriotic ardour, that holy
-enthusiasm, which has emblazoned the name of Andrew Marvel[87] with
-a saint-like glory! Let his name be consecrated by the reverence and
-the gratitude of every Englishman, and may we live to see a band
-of senators who will emulate his virtues! Could we have faith in
-speeches, many which we have heard and read are of much promise; let
-us hope that the day of performance is at hand.
-
-[Illustration: (end of chapter floral icon)]
-
-
-
-
-THE MARCH TO FINCHLEY.
-
- "Now I behold the chiefs in the pride of their former deeds;
- their souls are kindled at the battles of old, and the actions
- of other times. Their eyes are like flames of fire, and roll in
- search of the foes of the land. Their mighty hands are on their
- swords, and lightning pours from their sides of steel. They
- came like streams from the mountains; each rushed roaring from
- his hill. Bright are the chiefs of battle in the arms of their
- fathers."[88]--FINGAL, Book I. p. 7.
-
-[Illustration: THE MARCH TO FINCHLEY.]
-
-
-That so admirable a representation of the manners of England should
-be dedicated to the King of Prussia,[89] is one of those odd
-circumstances which must surprise a man who is not acquainted with
-the history of the plate. Before publication it was inscribed to
-his late Majesty, and the picture taken to St. James's, in the hope
-of royal approbation. George the Second was an honest man and a
-soldier, but not a judge of either a work of humour or a work of art.
-The corporal or sergeant he considered as employed in a way which
-dignified their nature, and gave them a title to the name and rank of
-gentlemen. The painter or engraver, however exquisite their skill,
-however elevated their conceptions, were on the King's scale mere
-mechanics.
-
-When told that Hogarth had painted a picture of the Guards on their
-march to Finchley, and meant to dedicate a print engraved from it to
-the King of Great Britain, his Majesty probably expected to see an
-allegorical representation of an army of heroes devoting their lives
-to the service of their country; and their sovereign, habited like
-"the mailed Mars," seated upon a cloud, where he might,
-
- "With a commanding voice,
- Cry havoc, and let slip the dogs of war."
-
-If such was his expectation, we may readily conceive his
-disappointment on viewing this delineation. His first question was
-addressed to a nobleman-in-waiting: "Pray, who is this Hogarth?" "A
-painter, my liege." "I hate _bainting_; and _boetry_ too! neither the
-one nor the other ever did any good! Does the fellow mean to laugh at
-my Guards?" "The picture, an please your Majesty, must undoubtedly be
-considered as a burlesque." "What! a _bainter_ burlesque a soldier?
-he deserves to be picketed for his insolence! Take his trumpery out
-of my sight."
-
-The print was returned to the artist, who, completely mortified
-at such a reception of what he very properly considered as his first
-work, immediately altered the inscription, inserting, instead of the
-King of England, the King of Prussia (as an encourager of the arts).
-
-Though the fine arts were never much encouraged in Prussia, the
-painter received a handsome acknowledgment for his dedication,
-and afterwards circulated proposals for publishing his print by
-subscription. Thus was it announced in the _General Advertiser_ of
-April 14, 1750:--"Mr. Hogarth is publishing by subscription a print,
-representing 'The March to Finchley' in the year 1746; engraved on a
-copperplate 22 inches by 17: the price, 7s. 6d.
-
-"Subscriptions are taken in at the Golden Head, in Leicester Fields,
-till the 30th of this instant, and no longer, to the end that the
-engraving may not be retarded.
-
-"_Note._--Each print will be half a guinea after the subscription is
-over.
-
-"In the subscription-book are the particulars of a proposal, whereby
-each subscriber of three shillings over and above the said seven
-shillings and sixpence for the print will, in consideration thereof,
-be entitled to a chance of having the original picture, which shall
-be delivered to the winning subscriber as soon as the engraving is
-finished."
-
-_General Advertiser_, May 1, 1750.--"Yesterday Mr. Hogarth's
-subscription was closed: eighteen hundred and forty-three chances
-being subscribed for, Mr. Hogarth gave the remaining hundred and
-sixty-seven chances to the Foundling Hospital, and the same night
-delivered the picture to the Governors."
-
-By the fortunate number being among those presented to a charity
-which he so much wished to serve, the artist was highly gratified.
-In a private house it would have been in a degree secluded from the
-public, and by the lapse of time have been transferred to those
-who could not appreciate its merit, and from either negligence or
-ignorance, might have been destroyed by damp walls, or effaced from
-the canvas by picture-cleaners. Here, it was likely to remain a
-permanent and honourable testimony of his talents and liberality.
-Notwithstanding all this, Hogarth soon after waited upon the
-treasurer of the hospital, and acquainted him, that if the trustees
-thought proper, they were at liberty to dispose of the picture by
-auction. His motives for giving this permission it is not easy
-to assign. They might have their origin in his desire to enrich
-a foundation which had his warmest wishes, or a natural though
-ill-judged ambition to have his greatest work in the possession of
-some one who had a collection of the old masters, with whom he in no
-degree dreaded a competition. Whether his mind was actuated by these
-or other causes is not important; certain it is that his opinion
-changed--he requested the trustees would not dispose of it, and
-never afterwards consented to the measure he himself had originally
-proposed. The late Duke of Ancaster's father wished to become a
-purchaser, and once offered the trustees three hundred pounds for
-it. I have been told that a much larger sum was since proffered by
-another gentleman.
-
-The scene is laid before the Adam and Eve, in Tottenham Court Road,
-and entitled, "A Representation of the March of the Guards towards
-Scotland in the year 1745."
-
-A handsome young grenadier has been denominated the principal figure,
-but may with more propriety be called the principal figure of the
-principal group. His countenance exhibits a strong contest between
-affection and duty; for the manner in which his Irish helpmate
-clings to his arm, and at the same time with threatening aspect
-lifts up her right hand grasping the _Remembrancer_,[90] proves to
-a moral certainty that to her he has made a matrimonial vow; while
-the tender, entreating distress of the poor girl at his right hand,
-seems to intimate that, though she possesses his heart, she can make
-no claim except to his gratitude and affection, both of which her
-present situation seems to demand. Her face forms a strong contrast
-to that of the fury who is on the other side; for while one is
-marked with grief and tender regret, the other has all the savage
-ferocity of an unchained tiger: she is an accomplished masculine
-tramp, perfectly qualified to follow a regiment, and would be as
-ready to plunder those that are slaughtered as to scold those who
-escape: being by no means of the class described by Dr. Johnson when,
-speaking of superfluous epithets, he says, "they are like the valets
-and washerwomen that follow an army, who add to the number without
-increasing the force." The papers of which these two claimants
-are the vendors determine their principles. The mild-tempered,
-soft-featured _gentlewoman_ with a cross upon a cloak, is evidently
-a hawker of the _Jacobites' Journal_, _Remembrancer_, and _London
-Evening Post_, papers remarkable for their inflammatory tendency;
-while a portrait of the gallant Duke of Cumberland, and the now
-popular ballad of _God save the King_, hang upon the basket of her
-rival.
-
-An old woman immediately behind, with a pipe in her mouth and a child
-on her back, appears to have grown rather ancient in the service;
-but notwithstanding her load and her poverty, puffs away care, and
-carries a cheerful countenance.
-
-Near the child's head a meagre Frenchman is whispering an old
-fellow, whom Mr. Thornton in his description of the plate calls an
-Independent; but as in the original painting part of a plaid appears
-under his greatcoat, the artist most probably intended it for an old
-Highlander in disguise. Rouquet, who perhaps had his explanation from
-Hogarth, describes it as follows:--
-
-"A droite du principal group paroit une figure de François, qu'on
-a voulu représenter comme un homme de quelque importance, afin de
-lui donner plus de ridicule; il parle à un homme dont la nation est
-indiquée par l'étoffe de sa veste, qui est celui dont s'habillent
-les habitans des montagnes d'Ecosse: le François semble communiquer
-à l'Ecossois des lettres qu'il vient de recevoir, et qui ont
-rapport à l'évenement qui donne lieu à cette marche. Les Anglois ne
-se réjouissent jamais bien sans qu'il en coute quelque chose aux
-François: leur théatre, leur conversation, leurs tableaux, et sur
-tout ceux de notre peintre, portent toujours cette glorieuse marque
-de l'amour de la patrie: les Romans même sont ornés de traits amusans
-sur cet ancien sujet; l'excellent auteur de _Tom Jones_, a voulu
-aussi lâcher les siens. Mais le prétendu mépris pour les François
-dont le peuple de ce pais-ci fait profession, s'explique selon moi
-d'une façon fort équivoque. Le mépris suppose l'oubli; mais un
-objet dont on médit perpétuellement occupé: la satire constitue une
-attention qui me feroit soupçonner qu'on fait aux François l'honneur
-de les haïr un peu."
-
-A drummer, sick of the remonstrances of his wife and child, each
-of whom made a forcible seizure of his person, actuated by a spirit
-similar to that of our third Richard, beats a thundering tattoo upon
-his own warlike instrument; and aided by the ear-piercing fife[91]
-at his right hand, drowns the noise of the tell-tale woman who thus
-endeavours to check his ardour and impede his march. A war-worn
-soldier contemplating a quack-doctor's bill, and a woman peeping out
-of a pent-house above, end the group at the left corner.
-
-Under a sign of the Adam and Eve a crowd are gathered round two
-combatants, who appear to be adepts in the noble science of boxing.
-
- "Amid the circle now each champion stands,
- And poises high in air his iron hands;
- Hurling defiance; now they fiercely close--
- Their crackling jaws re-echo to the blows."
-
-A man, who from his dress seems to be of a rank superior to the
-crowd, inflamed with a love of glory, enters with great spirit into
-the business now going on, and tries to inspire the combatants with
-a noble contempt of bruises and broken bones. This is said to be a
-portrait of Lord Albemarle Bertie, who is again exhibited in "The
-Cockpit." The scene being laid in the background, the figures are
-diminutive; but every countenance is marked with interest, and no
-one more than a little fellow[92] of meagre frame but undaunted
-spirit, who with clenched fists and agitated face deals blow for
-blow with the combatants. Somerville, in his _Rural Games_, has well
-described the passions which agitate the audience in a similar scene
-at a country wake:
-
- "Each swain his wish, each trembling nymph conceals
- Her secret dread; while every panting breast
- Alternate fears and hopes depress or raise.
- Thus, long in dubious scale the contest hung," etc.
-
-With a humour peculiar to himself, the painter has exhibited a figure
-shrinking under the weight of a heavy burden, who, preferring the
-gratification of curiosity to rest, is a spectator, and in this
-uneasy state waits the issue of the combat.
-
-Upon the sign-board of the Adam and Eve is inserted, "Tottenham Court
-Nursery," allusive to a booth for bruising in the place, as well as a
-nursery for plants, and the group of figures beneath.
-
-A carriage laden with camp equipage, consisting of drums, halberds,
-tent-poles, and hoop petticoats, is passing through the turnpike
-gate. Upon this, two old female campaigners are puffing their
-pipes, and holding a conversation in fire and smoke. These grotesque
-personages are well contrasted by an elegant and singularly delicate
-figure upon the same carriage, suckling her child; which, it has been
-said, proves that the painter is as successful in portraying the
-graceful as the humorous. This very beautiful figure is, however,
-almost a direct copy from Guido's "Madonna." To show that a little
-boy at her feet is of an heroic stock, the artist has represented him
-blowing a small trumpet. The sergeant on the ground beneath seems
-exerting the authority with which his post vests him in calling his
-men to order: he has a true roast-beef countenance, and is haughty
-enough for a general.
-
-The foreground in the centre is occupied by a group of figures, which
-tell their own story in a manner that perhaps no other artist of any
-age could have equalled. While an officer is kissing a milk-maid, an
-arch soldier, taking advantage of her neglected pails, fills his hat
-with milk: this is observed by a little chimney-sweeper, who, with a
-grin upon his face, entreats that he may have a share in the plunder,
-and fill his cap. Another soldier pointing out the jest to a fellow
-who is selling pies, the pastry-cook, gratified by the mischief,
-forgets the luscious cakes in the tray on his head, and the military
-Mercury seems likely to convey them all to his own pocket. The faces
-of this group are in a most singular degree descriptive of their
-situations, and consonant to their mischievous employments.
-
-An old soldier, divested of one spatterdash, near losing the other,
-and felled to the ground by all-potent gin, is now calling for more;
-his uncivil comrade, supporting him with one hand, endeavours to pour
-water into his mouth with the other; this the veteran toper rejects
-with disdain, and lifts up a hand to his wife, who is bearer of the
-arms and the bottle, and being well acquainted with his taste, fills
-another quartern.
-
-A child with emaciated face extends its little arms, and wishes
-for a taste of that poisonous potion it is probably accustomed to
-swallow: "And here" (says Mr. Thornton in the _Student_), "not to
-dwell wholly upon the beauties of this print, I must mention an error
-discovered by a professed connoisseur in painting. 'Can there,' says
-this excellent judge, 'be a greater absurdity than introducing a
-couple of chickens so near such a crowd; and not only so, but see
-their direction is to objects it is natural for them to shun.--Is
-this knowledge of nature? Absurd to the last degree!' And here,
-with an air of triumph, ended our judicious critic. How great was
-his surprise, when it was pointed out that the said chickens were
-in pursuit of the hen, which appears to have a resting-place in a
-sailor's pocket!"
-
-An honest tar, throwing up his hat, is crying "God save our noble
-King, God save the King:" immediately before him an image of drunken
-loyalty vows de--de--destruction on the heads of the rebels.
-
-A humane soldier perceiving a fellow heavy laden with a barrel of
-gin, and stopped by the crowd, bores a hole in the head of his cask,
-and kindly draws off a part of his burden. Near him is a figure of
-what may, in the army, be called a fine fellow.[93] As I suppose the
-painter designed him without character, I shall only observe that he
-is a very pretty gentleman; and happily the contemplation of his own
-dear person guards him from the attempts of the wicked woman on his
-right hand.[94]
-
-The invention of a new term must be pardoned--I shall include the
-whole King's Head in the word Cattery; the principal figure is a
-noted fat Covent Garden lady,[95] who, with pious eyes cast up to
-heaven, prays for the army's success, and the safe return of many of
-her babes of grace. An officer having placed a letter on the end of
-his pike, presents it to one of the beauties in the first floor;
-but the fair _enamorata_, evidently disgusted at the recollection
-of some part of his former conduct, flutters her fan and rejects
-it with disdain. Above her, a charitable girl of an inferior order
-is throwing a piece of coin to a cripple, while another kindly
-administers a glass of comfort to her companion as a sure relief
-against reflection. The rest of the windows are crowded with similar
-characters, and upon the house-top is a Cat coterie, a fair emblem of
-the company in the apartments beneath.
-
-The substance of the preceding remarks are, in this as in the first
-edition, taken from the _Student_, vol. ii. p. 162, and were made by
-the late Bonnell Thornton. In the _Old Woman's Magazine_, Doctor Hill
-has given an explanation which places it in a point of view somewhat
-different; I have therefore subjoined the greatest part of it.
-
- _To the Editor._
-
- "SIR,--As you desire my sentiments on Mr. Hogarth's picture, I
- shall begin with pointing out what is most defective. Its first
- and greatest fault, then, is its being new, and having too great
- a resemblance to the objects it represents: if this appears a
- paradox, you ought to take particular care of confessing it.
- This picture has yet too much of that lustre,--that despicable
- freshness which we discover in nature, and which is never seen
- in the celebrated cabinets of the curious. Time has not yet
- obscured it with that venerable smoke, that sacred cloud which
- will one day conceal it from the profane eyes of the vulgar, that
- its beauties may only be seen by those who are initiated in the
- mysteries of art. These are its most remarkable faults: and I
- am next going to give you an idea of the subject, which is the
- march of some companies of the foot guards to their rendezvous at
- Finchley Common, when sent against the Scottish rebels, who were
- advancing on that side.
-
- "Mr. Hogarth, who lets no opportunity escape him of observing the
- picturesque scenes which numerous assemblies frequently furnish,
- has not failed to represent them on the spot where he has drawn
- the scene of his picture.
-
- "The painter is remarkable for a particular sagacity in seizing
- a thousand little circumstances which escape the observation of
- the greatest part of the spectators, and it is a collection of a
- number of those circumstances which has composed, enriched, and
- diversified his work.
-
- "The scene is placed at Tottenham Court, where, in a distant
- view, is seen a file of soldiers marching in tolerable order up
- the hill. Discipline is less observed in the principal design;
- but if you complain of this, I must ingeniously inform you,
- that order and subordination belong only to slaves; for what
- everywhere else is called licentiousness, assumes here the
- venerable name of liberty.
-
- "A young grenadier, of a good mien, makes the principal figure in
- the first group; he is accompanied, or rather seized and beset,
- by two women, one of whom is a ballad-singer, and the other a
- news-hawker: they are both with child, and claim this hero as the
- father, and except this circumstance they have nothing in common;
- for their figures, their humours, their characters, appear
- extremely different: they are even of opposite parties, for the
- one disposes of works in favour of the Government, and the other
- against it.
-
- "On the left hand of this group is an officer embracing a
- milk-woman; but her greatest misfortune is, not her being hugged
- by a young cavalier, but in having one of her milk-pails seized
- by a wag, who pours her milk into a hat, while he is pretending
- to defend her. Near them is a pieman, who is mightily rejoiced
- at this roguery; while a soldier, who is fleering in his face,
- slily steals the pies he carries on his head. The humour of this
- group is greatly heightened by a chimney-sweeper's boy, who comes
- laughing to receive some of the milk into his hat, which he
- carries in his hand.
-
- "On the right hand of the principal group is a Frenchman, who, to
- give him a more ridiculous appearance, is represented as a man of
- some importance. He is speaking to a very odd person, to whom he
- seems communicating the contents of some letters relative to the
- event which is the cause of this march.
-
- "Behind the Frenchman just mentioned is seen an old sutler, who
- carries her child at her back, and is smoking a short pipe. In
- the front, at a small distance, is a drummer, who by the noise
- of his drum seems to endeavour to stun all thoughts of the fate
- of his family, who seek in vain to soften him by taking a tender
- leave.
-
- "One of the young pipers whom the Duke of Cumberland has
- introduced into several regiments, joins his noise to that of the
- drum, and by the agreeable appearance of his little person, is a
- contrast to the rudeness of the objects who are near him, etc.
- etc."
-
-To the dramatic effect of the picture, the late Mr. Arthur Murphy,
-whose acknowledged judgment give weight to his praise, bears the
-following honourable testimony in the _Gray's Inn Journal_, vol. i.
-No. 20:--
-
- "The era may arrive, when, through the instability of the English
- language, the style of _Joseph Andrews_ and _Tom Jones_ shall
- be obliterated, when the characters shall be unintelligible,
- and the humour lose its relish; but the many personages which
- the manner-painting hand of Hogarth has called forth into mimic
- life will not fade so soon from the canvas, and that admirable
- picturesque comedy, 'The March to Finchley,' will perhaps divert
- posterity as long as the Foundling Hospital shall do honour to
- the British nation."
-
-
-
-
-THE INVASION; OR, FRANCE AND ENGLAND.
-
-
-In the two following designs Mr. Hogarth has displayed that
-partiality for his own country, and contempt for France, which formed
-a strong trait in his character. He neither forgot nor forgave the
-insults he suffered at Calais, though he did not recollect that this
-treatment originated in his own ill-humour, which threw a sombre
-shade over every object that presented itself. Having early imbibed
-the vulgar prejudice that one Englishman was a match for four
-Frenchmen,[96] he thought it would be doing his country a service
-to prove the position. How far it is either useful or political to
-depreciate the power or degrade the character of that people with
-whom we are to contend, is a question which does not come within the
-plan of this work. In some cases it may create confidence, but in
-others leads to the indulgence of that negligent security by which
-armies have been slaughtered, provinces depopulated, and kingdoms
-changed their rulers.
-
-These two glaring contrasts were designed at a time when there was a
-rumour of an invasion from France. The sober politician treated this
-idle report with contempt; but by the credulous it was believed, and
-the timid trembled when they heard it. To dispel this phantom of the
-day was one motive for Hogarth's publication of these prints. They
-are not addressed to the philosopher or the legislator, but to the
-soldier and the sailor. They are not designed for the contemplation
-of the informed and travelled man, who considers himself as a citizen
-of the world; but for the true-born and true-bred Briton, that
-believes this to be the only country where man can enjoy happiness,
-and thinks an Englishman is the boast of the universe, the glory of
-creation, and the paragon of nature!
-
-
-PLATE I.
-
-FRANCE.
-
- "With lantern jaws, and croaking gut,
- See how the half-starv'd Frenchmen strut,
- And call us English dogs!
- But soon we'll teach these bragging foes,
- That beef and beer give heavier blows
- Than soup and roasted frogs.
-
- "The priests, inflam'd with righteous hopes,
- Prepare their axes, wheels, and ropes,
- To bend the stiff-neck'd sinner;
- But should they sink in coming over,
- Old Nick may fish 'twixt France and Dover,
- And catch a glorious dinner."
-
-[Illustration: FRANCE PLATE I.]
-
-The scenes of all Mr. Hogarth's prints, except "The Gate of Calais"
-and that now under consideration, are laid in England. In this,
-having quitted his own country, he seems to think himself out of the
-reach of the critics, and in delineating a Frenchman, at liberty to
-depart from nature, and sport in the fairy regions of caricature.
-Were these Gallic soldiers naked, each of them would appear like a
-forked radish, with a head fantastically carved upon it with a knife.
-So forlorn! that to any thick sight he would be invisible! To see
-this miserable woe-begone refuse of the army, who look like a group
-detached from the main body and put on the sick-list, embarking to
-conquer a neighbouring kingdom, is ridiculous enough, and at the
-time of publication must have had great effect. The artist seemed
-sensible that it was necessary to account for the unsubstantial
-appearance of these shadows of men, and has hinted at their want of
-solid food, in the bare bones of beef hung up in the window, the
-inscription on the alehouse sign, "Soup maigre à la sabot Royal,"
-and the spider-like officer roasting four frogs which he has impaled
-upon his sword. Such light and airy diet is whimsically opposed by
-the motto on the standard, which two of the most valorous of this
-ghastly troop are hailing with grim delight and loud exultation.
-It is indeed an attractive motto, and well calculated to inspire
-this famishing company with courage: "Vengeance, avec le bon bier,
-et bon beuf d'Angleterre." However meagre the military, the church
-militant is in no danger of starving. The portly friar is neither
-emaciated by fasting, nor weakened by penance. Anticipating the
-glory of extirpating heresy, he is feeling the sharp edge of an axe
-to be employed in the decollation of the enemies to the true faith,
-which if any one doubt, he shall die the death. A sledge is laden
-with whips, wheels, ropes, chains, gibbets, and other inquisitorial
-engines of torture, which are admirably calculated for the
-propagation of a religion that was established in meekness and mercy,
-and inculcates universal charity and forbearance. On the same sledge
-is an image of St. Anthony, very properly accompanied by his pig,
-and the plan of a monastery to be built at Blackfriars.
-
-In the background are a troop of soldiers so averse to this English
-expedition, that their sergeant is obliged to goad them forward with
-his halberd. To intimate that agriculture suffers by the invasion
-having engaged the masculine inhabitants, two women ploughing a
-sterile promontory in the distance complete this catalogue of
-wretchedness, misery, and famine.
-
-
-PLATE II
-
-ENGLAND.
-
- "See John the Soldier, Jack the Tar,
- With sword and pistol arm'd for war,
- Should _Mounseer_ dare come here;
- The hungry slaves have smelt our food,
- They long to taste our flesh and blood,
- Old England's beef and beer!
-
- "Britons, to arms! and let 'em come;
- Be you but Britons still, strike home,
- And lion-like attack 'em,
- No power can stand the deadly stroke
- That's given from hands and hearts of oak,
- With liberty to back 'em."
-
-[Illustration: ENGLAND PLATE II.]
-
-From the unpropitious regions of France, our scene changes to the
-fertile fields of England.
-
- "England! bound in with the triumphant sea,
- Whose rocky shores beat back the envious siege
- Of wat'ry Neptune."
-
-Instead of the forlorn and famished party who were represented in
-the last plate, we here see a company of well-fed and high-spirited
-Britons, marked with all the hardihood of ancient times, and eager to
-defend their country.
-
-In the first group, a young peasant who aspires to a niche in the
-Temple of Fame, preferring the service of Mars to that of Ceres, and
-the dignified appellation of soldier to the plebeian name of farmer,
-offers to enlist. Standing with his back against the halberd to
-ascertain his height, and finding he is rather under the mark,[97] he
-endeavours to reach it by rising on tiptoe. This artifice, to which
-he is impelled by _towering ambition_, the sergeant seems disposed to
-connive at--and the sergeant is a hero, and a great man in his way;
-"your hero always must be tall, you know."
-
-To evince that the polite arts were then in a flourishing state, and
-cultivated by more than the immediate professors, a gentleman artist,
-who to common eyes must pass for a grenadier, is making a caricature
-of _le Grand Monarque_. The sovereign of France was in that day as
-general a subject for copper satire as Mr. Fox is in this. I have
-seen engravings, where his Gallic Majesty made one of the party,
-that were not a degree better than the grenadier's drawing, where,
-to render the meaning obvious, and supply the want of character, or
-story, every figure had a label hanging to its mouth. That given to
-this king of shreds and patches is worthy the speaker, and worthy
-observation: "You take a my fine ships: you be de pirate; you be de
-teef: me send my grand armies, and hang you all."
-
-The action is suited to the word, for with his left hand this most
-Christian potentate grasps his sword, and in his right poises a
-gibbet. The figure and motto united, produce a roar of approbation
-from the soldier and sailor, who are criticising the work. It is
-so natural, that the Helen and Briseis of the camp contemplate the
-performance with apparent delight; and while one of them with her
-apron measures the breadth of this Herculean painter's shoulders,
-the other, to show that the performance _has some point_, places her
-forefinger against the prongs of a fork. The little fifer, playing
-that animated and inspiring tune "God save the King," is an old
-acquaintance: we recollect him in "The March to Finchley." In the
-background is a sergeant teaching a company of young recruits their
-manual exercise.
-
-This military meeting is held at the sign of the gallant Duke of
-Cumberland, who is mounted upon a prancing charger,
-
- "As if an angel dropt down from the clouds,
- To turn and wield a fiery Pegasus,
- And witch the world with noble horsemanship."[98]
-
-Underneath is inscribed, "Roast and boiled every day;" which, with
-the beef and beverage upon the table, forms a fine contrast to the
-_soup maigre_, bare bones, and roasted frogs, in the last print. The
-bottle painted on the wall, foaming with liquor which, impatient
-of imprisonment, has burst its cerements, must be an irresistible
-invitation to a thirsty traveller. The soldier's sword laid upon
-the round of beef, and the sailor's pistol on the vessel containing
-the ale, intimate that these great bulwarks of our island are as
-tenacious of their beef and beer as of their religion and liberty.
-
-These two plates were published in 1756; but in the _London
-Chronicle_ for October 20, 1759, is the following advertisement:--
-
- "This day are re-published, price 1s. each, Two prints designed
- and etched by William Hogarth: one representing the preparations
- on the French coast for an intended invasion; the other, a view
- of the preparations making in England to oppose the wicked
- designs of our enemies; proper to be stuck up in public places,
- both in town and country, at this juncture."[99]
-
-The verses which are inserted under each print, and subjoined to this
-account, are, it must be acknowledged, coarse enough. They were,
-however, written by David Garrick, who, had he thought the subject
-worthy of his muse, could, I believe, have produced more elegant
-stanzas.
-
-[Illustration: (end of chapter floral icon)]
-
-
-
-
-THE COCKPIT.
-
- "It is worth your while to come to England, were it only to
- see an election and a cock-match. There is a celestial spirit
- of anarchy and confusion in these two scenes that words cannot
- paint, and of which no countryman of yours can form even an
- idea."--_Sherlock's Letters to a friend at Paris._
-
-[Illustration: THE COCKPIT.]
-
-
-Mr. Sherlock is perfectly right in his assertion, that neither of
-these scenes can be described by words; but where the writer must
-have failed, the artist has succeeded, and the Parisian who has never
-visited England may, from Mr. Hogarth's Prints, form a tolerably
-correct idea of the anarchy of an election, and the confusion
-of a cockpit. To the right learned and laborious successors of
-Master Thomas Hearne, it would be matter of curious speculation,
-and worthy of deep research, to inquire which of these "popular
-sportes was fyrste practysed in fair Englonde." To their grave and
-useful investigations I leave the decision of this knotty point.
-The earliest information of this _gentile_ and _royal_ game which
-my reading supplies, I find in a treatise, published in 1674, and
-entitled _The Complete Gamester_, containing instructions how to play
-at Billiards, Trucks, Bowls, Chess, etc. "To which is added, The
-Artes and Mysteries of Riding, Racing, Archery, and Cock Fighting.
-Printed by A. M. for R. Cutler, and to be sold by Henry Brome, at
-the Gun, at the west end of St. Paul's." To this curious little
-_vade mecum_ there is a frontispiece divided into five compartments.
-One of them represents a cockpit, in the centre of which two of
-the feathered tribe, not unlike ducks, are fighting. The pit is
-surrounded by a company of crop-eared figures in round hats, with
-faces as demure and sanctified as are to be seen at a Quakers'
-meeting. Before many of these most sedate personages are heaps of
-gold, and (alluding to the print) the following sublime verses:--
-
- "After these three, the cockpit claims a name;
- A sport _gentile_, and call'd a royal game.
- Now see the gallants crowd about the pit,
- And most are stock'd with money more than wit;
- Else sure they would not, with so great a stir,
- Lay ten to one on a cock's faithless spur."
-
-To the respect which our ancestors had for this _kingly_ amusement,
-the author beareth ample testimony in his 38th chapter, some extracts
-from which I venture to insert, with the hope that they will be both
-pleasant and profitable to the lovers of this very refined and humane
-divertisement:--
-
- "It is a sport or pastime so full of delight and pleasure, that I
- know not any game in that respect is to be preferred before it;
- and since the fighting cock hath gained so great an estimation
- among the gentry, in respect to this noble recreation, I shall
- here propose it before all the other games of which I have afore
- succinctly discoursed. That, therefore, I may methodically give
- instructions to such as are unlearned, and add more knowledge
- to such who have already gained a competent proficiency in this
- pleasing art, I shall, as briefly as I can, give you information
- how you shall choose, breed, and diet the fighting cock, with
- what choice secrets are thereunto belonging, in order thus:--
-
- "In the election[100] of a fighting cock, there are four things
- principally to be considered; and they are: shape, colour,
- courage, and a sharp heel.
-
- "Observe the crowing of your chickens; if you find them crow too
- soon, that is, before six months old, or unseasonably, and that
- their crowing is clear and loud, fit them as soon as you can for
- the pot or spit, for they are infallible signs of cowardice and
- falsehood: on the contrary, the true and perfect cock is long
- before he obtaineth his voice, and when he hath got it, observeth
- his hours with the best judgment."
-
-After much more which I have not room to insert, the author addeth,
-"To conclude, make your choice of such a one that is of shape strong,
-of colour good, of valour true, and of heel sharp and ready."
-
-Leaving the book to the study of those whom it may concern, let us
-now attend to the plate.
-
-The scene is probably laid at Newmarket;[101] and in this motley
-group of peers, pickpockets, butchers, jockeys, ratcatchers,
-gentlemen,--gamblers of every denomination,--Lord Albemarle
-Bertie,[102] being the principal figure, is entitled to precedence.
-In a former print[103] we saw him an attendant at a boxing match;
-and here he is president of a most respectable society assembled
-at a cockpit. What rendered his Lordship's passion for amusements
-of this nature very singular, was his being totally blind. In this
-place he is beset by seven steady friends, five of whom at the same
-instant offer to bet with him on the event of the battle. One of
-them, a lineal descendant of Filch, taking advantage of his blindness
-and negligence, endeavours to convey a bank note, deposited in our
-dignified gambler's hat, to his own pocket. Of this ungentleman-like
-attempt his Lordship is apprised by a ragged postboy and an honest
-butcher: but so much engaged in the pronunciation of those important
-words, "Done! done! done! done!" and the arrangement of his bets,
-that he cannot attend to their hints; and it seems more than probable
-that the stock will be _transferred_ and the note _negotiated_ in a
-few seconds.
-
-A very curious group surround the old nobleman, who is adorned
-with a riband, a star, and a pair of spectacles. The whole weight
-of an overgrown carpenter being laid upon his shoulder, forces our
-illustrious personage upon a man beneath; who being thus driven
-downward, falls upon a fourth; and the fourth, by the accumulated
-pressure of this ponderous trio--composed of the _upper and lower
-house_--loses his balance, and tumbling against the edge of the
-partition, his head is broke, and his wig, shook from the seat of
-reason, falls into the cockpit.
-
-A man adjoining enters into the spirit of the battle--his whole
-soul is engaged. From his distorted countenance and clasped hands,
-we see that he feels every stroke given to his favourite bird in
-his heart's core, ay, in his heart of hearts! A person at the old
-Peer's left hand is likely to be a loser. Ill-humour, vexation, and
-disappointment are painted in his countenance. The chimney-sweeper
-above is the very quintessence of affectation. He has all the airs
-and graces of a boarding-school miss. There are those who remember
-the man, and declare that his character is not heightened in the
-portrait. The sanctified Quaker adjoining, and the fellow beneath,
-who, by the way, is a very similar figure to Captain Stab in "The
-Rake's Progress," are finely contrasted.
-
-A French marquis, on the other side, astonished at this being called
-amusement, is exclaiming _Sauvages! sauvages! sauvages!_ Engrossed by
-the scene, and opening his snuff-box rather carelessly, its contents
-fall into the eyes of a man below, who, sneezing and swearing
-alternately, imprecates bitter curses on this devil's dust, that
-extorts from his inflamed eyes "a sea of melting pearls, which some
-call tears."
-
-Adjoining is an old cripple with a trumpet at his ear, and in this
-trumpet a person in a bag-wig roars in a manner that cannot much
-gratify the auricular nerves of his companions; but as for the object
-to whom the voice is directed, he seems totally insensible to sounds,
-and if judgment can be formed from appearances, might very composedly
-stand close to the clock of St. Paul's Cathedral when it was striking
-twelve.
-
-The figure with a cock peeping out of a bag is said to be intended
-for Jackson, a jockey. The gravity of this experienced veteran, and
-the cool sedateness of a man registering the wagers, are well opposed
-by the grinning woman behind, and the heated impetuosity of a fellow,
-stripped to his shirt, throwing his coin upon the cockpit, and
-offering to back Ginger against Pye for a guinea.
-
-On the lower side, where there is only one tier of figures, a sort
-of an apothecary, and a jockey, are stretching out their arms and
-striking together the handles of their whips in token of a bet. An
-hiccuping votary of Bacchus, displaying a half-emptied purse, is not
-likely to possess it long; for an adroit professor of legerdemain has
-taken aim with an hooked stick, and by one slight jerk will convey it
-to his own pocket. The profession of a gentlemen in a round wig is
-determined by a gibbet chalked upon his coat. An enraged barber, who
-lifts up his stick in the corner, has probably been refused payment
-of a wager by the man at whom he is striking.
-
-A cloud-capt philosopher at the top of the print, coolly smoking
-his pipe, unmoved by this crash of matter and wreck of property,
-must not be overlooked: neither should his dog be neglected; for the
-dog, gravely resting his fore-paws upon the partition,[104] and
-contemplating the company, seems more interested in the event of the
-battle than his master.
-
-Like the tremendous Gog and terrific Magog of Guildhall, stand the
-two cock-feeders; a foot of each of these consequential purveyors is
-seen at the two extremities of the pit.
-
-As to the birds whose attractive powers have drawn this admiring
-throng together, they deserved earlier notice--
-
- "Each hero burns to conquer or to die,
- What mighty hearts in little bosoms lie!"
-
-Having disposed of the substances, let us now attend to the shadow on
-the cockpit, and this it seems is the reflection of a man drawn up
-to the ceiling in a basket, and there suspended[105] as a punishment
-for having betted more money than he can pay. Though suspended, he
-is not reclaimed; though exposed, not abashed; for in this degrading
-situation he offers to stake his watch against money in another wager
-on his favourite champion.
-
-The decorations of this curious theatre are, a portrait of Nan
-Rawlins,[106] and the King's arms.
-
-In the margin at the bottom of the print is an oval, with a fighting
-cock, inscribed "Royal sport," and underneath it is written, "Pit
-ticket."
-
-Of the characteristic distinctions in this heterogeneous assembly, it
-is not easy to speak with sufficient praise. The chimney-sweeper's
-absurd affectation sets the similar airs of the Frenchman in a most
-ridiculous point of view. The old fellow with a trumpet at his ear
-has a degree of deafness that I never before saw delineated; he might
-have lived in the same apartment with Xantippe, or slept comfortably
-in Alexander the coppersmith's first floor. As to the nobleman in the
-centre, in the language of the turf, he is a mere pigeon; and the
-Peer, with a star and garter, in the language of Cambridge, we must
-class as--a mere quiz. The man sneezing, you absolutely hear; and the
-fellow stealing a bank note has all the outward and visible marks of
-a perfect and accomplished pickpocket; Mercury himself could not do
-that business in a more masterly style.
-
-I hope it will not be thought irrelevant to my subject if I here name
-a man whose periods have polished the English language, and given to
-poesy a harmony before unknown.
-
-To Alexander Pope, Hogarth had an early dislike. Pope was the friend
-of Lord Burlington,--Lord Burlington was the patron of Kent, and Kent
-was the rival of Sir James Thornhill, who was the father-in-law of
-William Hogarth. In two of his miscellaneous prints, our mellifluous
-poet is exhibited in very degrading situations. In one[107] he is
-represented as whitewashing the gate of Burlington House, and in the
-violence of his operation bespattering the carriage of his Grace of
-Chandos, etc.; and in the other, picking John Gay's[108] pocket.
-
-Had the artist been acquainted with a circumstance mentioned by Mr.
-Tyers in his _Rhapsody_, our British Horace would very probably have
-had a place in this group. Tyers tells us that "Pope, while living
-with his father at Chiswick, before he went to Binfield, took great
-delight in cock-fighting, and laid out all his schoolboy money, and
-little perhaps it was, in buying fighting cocks. From this passion,
-but surely not the play of a child, his mother had the dexterity to
-wean him."
-
-Admitting the fact, for which I have no other authority than the
-pamphlet above quoted, it does not tell in favour of that delicate
-and tender humanity which this elegant poet so much affected. On his
-conduct to Lady Mary Wortley Montagu, Lord Bolingbroke, Mr. Addison,
-and Mr. Broome, I will make no comment; but his bitter satire on the
-Duke of Chandos,[109] while it exalts his poetical powers, dishonours
-his moral character. The animation, energy, and elegance of the
-stanzas would atone for almost anything--but _ingratitude_!
-
-Lord Orrery observes: "If we may judge of Mr. Pope from his works,
-his chief aim was to be esteemed a man of virtue." When actions
-can be clearly ascertained, it is not necessary to seek the mind's
-construction in the writings; and I regret being compelled to believe
-that some of Mr. Pope's actions, at the same time that they prove him
-to be querulous and petulant, lead us to suspect that he was also
-envious, malignant, and cruel. How far this will tend to confirm
-the assertion, that when a boy he was an amateur[110] of this royal
-sport,[111] I do not pretend to decide: but were a child in whom
-I had any interest cursed with such a propensity, my first object
-would be to correct it; if that were impracticable, and he retained
-a fondness for the cockpit, and the still more detestable amusement
-of Shrove Tuesday,[112] I should hardly dare to flatter myself that
-he could become a merciful man. The subject has carried me further
-than I intended. I will, however, take the freedom of proposing one
-query to the consideration of the clergy, should any of that sacred
-order do me the honour of perusing this volume. Might it not have a
-tendency to check that barbarous spirit, which has more frequently
-its source in an early acquired habit arising from the prevalence
-of example than in natural depravity, if every divine in Great
-Britain were to preach at least one sermon every twelve months on our
-universal insensibility to the sufferings of the brute creation?[113]
-
-[Illustration: (end of chapter floral icon)]
-
-
-
-
-CREDULITY, SUPERSTITION, AND FANATICISM.
-
-A MEDLEY.
-
- "Believe not every spirit, but try the spirits whether they
- are of God; because many false prophets are gone out into the
- world."--1 JOHN IV. 1.
-
-[Illustration: CREDULITY SUPERSTITION AND FANATICISM.]
-
-
-Whoever reads history with a view of tracing the progress of the
-human mind,--which, by the way, is the great object that renders
-history useful,--whoever reads history with that regard, must be
-astonished and shocked at the slow progress of philosophy, and the
-universal prevalence of credulity, superstition, and fanaticism. If
-antiquity would give a claim to reverence, this destructive band
-have a date prior to Christianity; their united power shed baneful
-influence on the earliest ages.
-
-In the pagan temples there was a kind of incantation for conjuring
-down deities, to whom were assigned niches according to their
-different degrees of rank. The histories of Greece and Rome (for
-the sake of human nature, I wish that the parallel did not reach
-modern times) display an innumerable host of all ages, sexes,
-descriptions, and characters, enlisted under the banner of the
-priesthood, together with a select _corps de reserve_ of augurs and
-soothsayers, who, by inspecting the entrails of beasts, foretold
-future events, and from the flight of birds the defeat of armies.
-Succeeding ages beheld their heathen temples solemnly consecrated;
-and being thus metamorphosed into Christian churches, the sculptures
-representing Jupiter, Minerva, Venus, and Diana, by virtue of a new
-baptism, became saints.[114]
-
-Here also were a legion of arrogant priests, who insolently dictated
-the terms of salvation, fixed a standard for universal belief, and
-introduced their own inventions as divine precepts; who forced
-monarchs to pay tribute by ecclesiastical privilege, assumed the
-dominion of empires by divine right, and claimed three-fourths
-of the known world as heirs-at-law to St. Peter. To secure their
-acquisitions, they entrenched themselves behind ramparts raised on
-the credulity and folly of mankind. He who attempted to scale these
-hallowed mounds was deemed guilty of sacrilege; he who questioned
-the catholic infallibility was an atheist; and whosoever doubted the
-divine mission of a priest--an infidel.[115]
-
-Finding the multitude were so well inclined to believe that whatever
-they could not comprehend was supernatural, they construed each
-phenomenon of nature into a portentous menace from Heaven. An eclipse
-became the omen of a revolution; an inundation the prognostic of a
-defeat; and an hurricane foretold the fall of every power that made
-any opposition to papal authority. By arts like these, the people
-were brought into a mental vassalage; and the powerful Baron having
-previously enslaved their persons, they readily gave the care of
-their souls to the confessor. To him they applied as the proper
-interpreter of every difficult case; and fraught with a full portion
-of credulity, each individual considered every cloud that passed over
-the sun, and every raven that expanded its ebon wing, as bearing
-some particular direction to himself. Hence arose the doctrine of
-demonology; and apparitions, witches, dreams, and divinations,
-formed a creed of superstition. On this was built that notable
-system, properly enough called "The Philosophy of the Distaff." This
-mythology of weak minds has been carried through every age and
-country by oral tradition and unfounded record.
-
-Our earliest histories abound in augury and prediction; the most
-fabulous tales had credence, not only with the unlearned and
-ignorant, but with the educated and sagacious. The grave Duke de
-Sully seriously narrates those which had relation to Henry the Fourth.
-
-It is recorded by Victorius Sirri, that Louis the Thirteenth was from
-his infancy surnamed Just,--"because he was born under the sign of
-the Balance!"
-
-Even sorcery was made a leading branch of religion; and one of a
-priest's duties was to exorcise ghosts by talking Latin, which was
-considered as a never-failing antidote for a troublesome spirit, and
-invariably concluded by the ghost being _laid in the Red Sea_.
-
-Some of these glaring errors have been obliterated, but absurdities
-of equal magnitude have supplied their place; and modern credulities
-are nearly as destructive to the interests of society as ancient
-superstitions.
-
-Though this nation, as well as others, was at an early period
-enveloped by ignorance, superstition, and their consequent
-accompaniments, we had some right to expect the clouds would have
-been dispelled by the Reformation; but credulity kept its ground,
-and at a still later period--when we had a most learned and sedate
-monarch, and a most sententious and grave Parliament--an Act was
-passed for the punishment of witchcraft! By this sagacious union of
-royal and national wisdom, if a woman lived to a greater age than her
-neighbour, she was tried, proved guilty of commercing with a familiar
-in the shape of a tabby cat, and eased of all her sufferings by the
-ordeal of fire or water.
-
-It is not many years since a fanatic in one of our colonies took a
-fancy to accuse a neighbour of witchcraft: the crime was clearly
-proved, and the poor culprit suffered according to law. In credulity
-and superstition there is something epidemical. The contagion spread;
-and this being found a summary process for removing a competitor
-in trade, or revenging an insult, informations for sorcery became
-frequent. Their sessions-house was crowded with witches, as is that
-at the Old Bailey with pickpockets. It however brought fees, and so
-far was well: but these sapient legislators at length discovered that
-the province was likely to be depopulated; and what affected them
-still more, their own fraternity were liable to the consequences.
-A man, who had been cheated by his lawyer, made an affidavit that
-said lawyer was a wizard. This was too much: the court had a special
-meeting, and unanimously determined that they would not receive any
-more informations against wizards. The bye-law had the effect of a
-charm, and sorcery was no more!
-
-Lord Bacon somewhere remarks that superstition is worse than atheism.
-It takes from religion every attraction, every comfort; and the place
-of humble hope and patient resignation is supplied by melancholy,
-despair, and madness!
-
-To the best minds, credulity is the source of much misery. Our
-first Charles, who, with all his errors as a king, had the manners
-and mind of a gentleman, was so much under its influence, that
-he never enjoyed a day's happiness after consulting the _Sortes
-Virgilianæ_.[116]
-
-In our age--an age in many respects enlightened by the beams of
-philosophy--the effects resulting from credulity, superstition,
-and fanaticism are dreadful; but while the evils are contemplated
-with horror, the system is too ridiculous for sober reasoning. It
-induces the infatuated votary to believe that being in the pale of
-a particular church will ensure his salvation. The ignorant are
-confounded with metaphysical subtleties which the wisest cannot
-comprehend; and by combining different texts of holy writ, we are
-insulted with conclusions contrary to common sense.[117]
-
-To check this inundation of absurdity, which deemed carnal reason
-profane, and was not to be combated by argument, Mr. Hogarth engraved
-this print; it contains what must ever operate as a complete
-refutation of those who, because they were his opponents in politics,
-have impudently asserted that he lost his talents in the decline
-of life: for though the delineation was made in his sixty-fourth
-year, in satire, wit, and imagination, it is superior to any of his
-preceding works.
-
-The text "I speak as a fool" is a type of the preacher, whose
-strength of lungs is a convenient substitute for strength of
-argument. He is literally a Boanerges; his tones rend the region,
-and the thunder of his eloquence has cracked the sounding-board. His
-right hand poises a witch astride upon a broom-stick, and in his
-left he suspends an emissary of Satan: this embryotic demon wields a
-gridiron as a terror to the ungodly, and at the witch's breast is an
-incubus in the shape of a cat.[118] Considering action as the first
-requisite of an orator, our ecclesiastical juggler throws his whole
-frame into convulsions: he shakes as the lofty cedar in a storm. Like
-Milton's devil,
-
- "With head, hands, wings, or feet, he works his way,
- And swims, or sinks, or wades, or creeps, or flies."
-
-By these violent agitations his gown flies open, and discovers that
-this Proteus of the pulpit is arrayed in a Harlequin's jacket; and
-his wig falling off, displays the shaven crown of a Jesuit. But
-the loss of a periwig is not attended to, his denunciations are
-redoubled, his fulminations hurled indiscriminately around; he
-scatters about firebrands; and darts, pointed with destruction,
-and barbed with death, pierce the hearts of his terrified hearers.
-Wrought up to the highest pitch of seraphic fervour, fevered by the
-heat of his own ecstasies,--the whole man is inspired,--and mounted
-upon the clouds of mystery, he soars through the dark regions of
-superstition, settles in the third heaven, and breathes empyreal air.
-
-The train is fired,--the contagion spreads, the cup of delusion is
-filled to the brim, and each of his infatuated auditors intoxicated
-with the fumes of enthusiastic madness.
-
- "Broken each link of reason's chain,
- Witchcraft and magic hold their reign;
- Terror and comfortless despair,
- And fond credulity is there.
- Circling all nature's vast profound,
- Imagination takes her round,
- Starting at spectres,--painting fairies,
- Fancy, with all her wild vagaries,
- Dances on enchanted ground.
- Now with wings sublime she flies
- Where planets roll in azure skies;
- Now o'er clouds where tempests low'r,
- To where the rushing waters pour:
- Thence through the vasty void descends,
- Where Chaos warring atoms blends,
- To darksome caves of deepest hell,
- Where sullen ghosts and torturing demons dwell."
-
-With a postboy's cap upon his head, to denote that he is a special
-messenger from above, a little cherubimic Mercury flies through the
-clouds, and bears in his mouth an express directed to Saint Money
-Trapp.
-
-Immediately beneath the pulpit are two lambs of the flock in an
-ecstasy. The young man with a round head of hair is probably a lay
-preacher; for though he has not a sable coat, he has a black collar.
-Piously entreating a young maiden, who meets his advances with an
-holy zeal, he puts the waxen model of a female saint down her bosom.
-
-In the same pew are two fellows very differently affected: one of
-them, with a despairing countenance, sheds iron tears; the other,
-like the wet sea-boy on the mast, sleeps through the terrors of the
-storm, though a malignant imp of darkness, envying his serenity,
-endeavours to awake him by a whisper,[119] that he also may share
-such curses as would serve for a supplement to St. Ernulphus.[120]
-
-Between two duck-winged cherubs, who are studying the laughing
-and crying gamut, is the harpy clerk. This crook-mouthed echo of
-absurdity, and associate in villany, has the true physiognomy of a
-Tartuffe: every feature is charged with hypocrisy.
-
-The congregation,[121] many of whom have been imported from Liffey's
-verdant banks, bear their parts in this enchanting serenade; and the
-bull roar of the preacher, combined with a chorus of sighs, groans,
-and shrieks, must produce a symphony that might vie with the Irish
-howl or Indian war-whoop.
-
-Among the crowd we discover a youthful convert under the guidance
-of his spiritual confessor,[122] who, pointing to Brimstone Ocean,
-unfolds a tale which terrifies his disciple to a degree that
-
- "Must harrow up his soul; freeze his young blood;
- Make his two eyes like stars start from their spheres;
- His knotty and combined locks to part,
- And each particular hair to stand on end,
- Like quills upon the fretful porcupine."
-
-The sanguinary Jew, while he leans upon an altar, on which lies a
-knife inscribed "bloody," sacrifices to his revenge an unfortunate
-insect which he caught carelessly wandering on the environs of his
-head.
-
-Beneath is Mrs. Tofts, of Godalming, well known in the annals of
-credulity; in the violence of her paroxysm, she breaks a dram glass
-with her teeth.[123]
-
-Next to Mrs. Tofts is a possessed shoeblack, coolly clearing his
-stomach of a quantity of hob-nails and iron staples.[124] In his hand
-he holds a quart bottle, in which the model of a spirit is closely
-cribbed--confin'd; but the imprisoned sprite forcing the cork,
-mounts into the regions of air with a lighted taper in its hand.[125]
-The book on which our sable professor of necromancy has deposited his
-basket, is King James's _Demonology_;[126] this, with Whitfield's
-_Journal_, which lies among the implements of his art, covertly
-intimate the sources where he had sought and found inspiration.
-
-The ridicule is wound up by a Turk, whom we see through a window
-smoking his tube of Trinidado; lifting up his eyes with astonishment
-at the scene, he breathes a grateful ejaculation, and thanks his
-Maker that he was early initiated in the divine truths of the Koran,
-is out of the pale of this church, and has his name engraven on the
-tablets of Mahomet.
-
-As all the decorations which are displayed in this temple of
-credulity, superstition, and fanaticism are suitable to the
-congregation, the carved figures on the pulpit are worthy of
-the preacher. We are in the first compartment presented with
-the apparition which warned Sir George Villiers of the Duke
-of Buckingham's danger from the knife of Felton;[127] in the
-second, with Julius Cæsar's ghost reproaching Brutus; and in
-the third, with the ghost of Mrs. Veale, which appeared to Mrs.
-Bargrave,[128]--because a very large impression of _Drelincourt upon
-Death_ lay in the bookseller's warehouse, and would not move without
-a marvellous relation of an apparition.
-
-Beneath is a figure of the Tedworth drummer, who so wickedly
-disturbed the family of Mr. Mompesson;[129] and in the frame
-below, a representation of Fanny, the phantom of Cock Lane, with
-her hammer in her right hand. These two notable memorials of
-credulity are placed as a kind of headpiece to a mental thermometer,
-which ascertains the different degrees of heat in the blood of an
-enthusiast. When the liquid ascends, it rises from lukewarm to
-love-heat,--ecstasy! convulsion fits,--madness,--and terminates in
-raving, which is properly obscured by clouds, and above the ken of
-human comprehension. In its falling state, the progress of religious
-depression is most accurately marked. From low spirits it sinks to
-sorrow, agony, settled grief, despair, madness,--suicide! The whole
-rests on Wesley's _Sermons_, and Glanville _On Witches_.[130]
-
-On the preacher's left hand, suspended to a ring inserted in a human
-nostril, hangs the scale of vociferation. A _natural tone_ is at the
-bottom, but the _speaker's tone_ is described by the distended mouth
-above the scale, crying Blood! blood! blood! and inscribed "Bull
-roar."
-
-To the hook of the chandelier hangs a small sphere, on which is
-engraven, "Desarts of new Purgatory." On the globe, out of which
-spring the branches for candles, is written, "A globe of hell, as
-newly drawn by R----ne" (Romaine). It is so formed as to give the
-caricature of a human face, and baptized "Horrid Zone." Round one
-of the eyes is inscribed "The Bottomless Pit;" round the other,
-"Molten-lead Lake." On one cheek is "Brimstone Ocean;" on the other,
-"Parts Unknown;" and round the mouth, "Eternal Damnation Gulf."
-Horribly profane as are these mottoes, they are mere copies of
-Tabernacle phraseology. In the same class comes the hymn, which is
-placed before the clerk:
-
- "Only _love_ to us be given;
- Lord, we ask no other heaven."[131]
-
-The poor's box is a mouse-trap, which very fairly intimates that
-whatever money is deposited will be secured for the _faithful
-collectors_. It may be further meant to insinuate, that whosoever is
-caught in this necromantic snare will be in the state of Sterne's
-starling, and cannot get out, for it is planted with pointed steel,
-and tears in pieces those who attempt an escape.
-
-[Illustration: (end of chapter floral icon)]
-
-
-
-
-THE TIMES.
-
-
-PLATE I.
-
- "The gods of old were logs of wood,
- And worship was to puppets paid:
- In antic dress the puppet stood,
- And priests and people bow'd the head."
-
-[Illustration: THE TIMES. PLATE I.]
-
-There are three things of which your Englishman deems himself the
-best of all possible judges: the art of stirring a fire, religion,
-and politics. His infallibility in the first no one will presume to
-question, except his wife; and with her he will dispute as long as
-disputing is good. The mysteries of the second he understands better
-than the Archbishop of Canterbury. As to the intricacies of the
-third, which thinking men are apt to consider in some degree hidden
-from those who are not admitted into the arcana, he can unravel them
-with more ease, and point out with more precision what steps ought to
-be taken, than can the Prime Minister, with all the aggregate wisdom
-of the Cabinet.
-
-So many of his Majesty's good subjects being thus gifted with an
-intuitive knowledge of state affairs, it is no wonder that Britain
-holds so high a rank among the nations; for each act of government is
-stated and debated, not only in the two Houses of Parliament, but in
-every tavern, coffeehouse, and porter-house in the metropolis.
-
-To these eloquent leaders of the numerous clubs, we may add a myriad
-of political writers, who are all but inspired. Without studying
-either Machiavel, Locke, or Sidney, they pour forth a torrent of
-lucubrations on the floating subjects of the hour; that hour past,
-their letters, replies, remarks, and rejoinders are heard of no more.
-
-In the hope of giving their puny offspring a longer life, some of
-these learned Thebans, or their booksellers, called in the aid
-of artists, to adorn their labours with _taking_ frontispieces.
-These graphic ornaments were in general about as _lively_ as the
-pamphlets they decorated; and it was found that the united efforts of
-author, printer, painter, engraver, and publisher, could not ensure
-immortality. Notwithstanding this general failure in their intended
-operation, they had one very awkward effect. A sort of political
-influenza was communicated to our engravers, and they also became
-deep statesmen and profound politicians. While part of this band
-sharpened their burins, and defaced much good copper in caricaturing
-the members of administration, their opponents were equally
-industrious, and equally pointed, in _taking off_ the _honourable
-gentlemen_ on the other side of the house.
-
-The buzzing of these insects of a day was little attended to: their
-dulness preserved them from laughter, their weakness protected them
-from resentment; they excited no passion except contempt.
-
-Very different was the public expectation when it was found that
-Hogarth intended to publish a series of political prints. From his
-former productions they knew his powers, and considered him as able
-to throw any party into ridicule. That which he was expected to
-attack dreaded the strength of his aquafortis, which they apprehended
-would have the effect of a caustic, not only on his copper, but on
-the objects of his satire.
-
-Previous to the publication of "The Times," Mr. Wilkes, who was then
-at Aylesbury, was informed that the print was political, and that
-Lord Temple, Mr. Pitt, Mr. Churchill, and himself, were the leading
-characters held up to ridicule. Under the impression which this
-intelligence conveyed, he sent Mr. Hogarth a remonstrance, stating
-the ungenerous tendency of such a proceeding; which would be more
-glaringly unfriendly, as the two last-mentioned gentlemen and the
-artist had always lived upon terms of strict intimacy. This produced
-a reply, in which Hogarth asserted that neither Mr. Wilkes nor Mr.
-Churchill were introduced, but Lord Temple and Mr. Pitt were, and
-the print should be published in a few days. To this it was answered,
-that Mr. Wilkes would hardly deem it worth while to notice any
-reflections on himself; but if his friends were attacked, it would
-wound him in the most sensible part, and, well as he was able, he
-should revenge their cause. This was a direct declaration of war: the
-black flag was hoisted on both sides, and never did two angry men of
-their abilities throw mud with less dexterity.
-
-"The Times" was soon after published, and on the Saturday following,
-in No. 17 of the _North Briton_, a most unmerciful attack was
-directed against the King's Serjeant Painter. Since that period,
-marvellous have been the variations of the patriotic needle; the
-Colonel of the Buckinghamshire Militia has filled the first offices
-in the city of London, and is now become chamberlain. Having in
-these situations seen the errors of his former politics, he would,
-I must think, be the first to acknowledge that the attack was not
-only unmerciful, but in many respects unjust. The hand of time having
-worn down political asperities, I hope--I believe--Mr. Wilkes will
-have no objection to this nettle, forced in the hotbed of a party,
-being plucked from that hallowed sod which covers the dust of William
-Hogarth.
-
-Should the artist and the chamberlain meet in Elysium, why may
-they not drink oblivion to former feuds in a glass of Lethe? The
-chamberlain would, I fancy, prefer champagne; but when a gentleman
-travels in a strange country, he must take up with such beverage as
-the place affords.
-
-The attack commences with a ridicule of the _Analysis of Beauty_, or
-rather of Hogarth's honesty in acknowledging that he was indebted to
-a friend for a third part of the wording. The artist was sensible of
-his own strength; but what is much more rare, he was conscious of
-his own weakness. He knew the principles of his art; but not being
-accustomed to explaining them with a pen, very prudently asked the
-aid of those who were, to give his ideas such language as would
-render them worthy public attention. This was at least honest; but as
-the author of the _North Briton_ presents us with only part of the
-apology, let us do the artist justice by inserting the whole.
-
-After some leading remarks on the system which it was his wish to
-establish, he continues as follows:--
-
-"But observing in the fore-mentioned controversies that the torrent
-generally ran against me, and that several of my opponents had turned
-my arguments into ridicule, yet were daily availing themselves of
-their use, and venting them even to my face as their own, I began to
-wish the publication of something on this subject; and accordingly
-applied myself to several of my friends, whom I thought capable of
-taking up the pen for me, offering to furnish them with materials
-by word of mouth. But finding this method not practicable, from the
-difficulty of one man's expressing the ideas of another, especially
-on a subject which he was either unacquainted with, or was new in its
-kind, I was therefore reduced to an attempt of finding such words as
-would best answer my own ideas, being now too far engaged to drop the
-design. Hereupon, having digested the matter as well as I could, and
-thrown it into the form of a book, I submitted it to the judgment
-of such friends whose sincerity and abilities I could best rely on,
-determining on their approbation or dislike to publish or destroy
-it. But their favourable opinion of the manuscript being publicly
-known, it gave such a credit to the undertaking as soon changed the
-countenances of those who had a better opinion of my pencil than
-my pen, and turned their sneers into expectation, especially when
-the same friends had kindly made me an offer of conducting the work
-through the press; and here I must acknowledge myself particularly
-indebted to one gentleman for his corrections and amendments of
-at least a third part of the wording. Through his absence and
-avocation, several sheets went to the press without any assistance,
-and the rest had the occasional inspection of one or two friends.
-If any inaccuracies shall be found in the writing, I shall readily
-acknowledge them all my own, and am, I confess, under no great
-concern about them, provided the matter in general may be useful
-and answerable, in the application of it, to truth and to nature; in
-which material points if the reader shall think fit to rectify any
-mistakes, it will give me a sensible pleasure, and be doing great
-honour to the work."--_Preface to Analysis_, p. 20, edit of 1772.
-
-The author of the _North Briton_ continues: "We all titter the
-instant he takes up a pen, but we tremble when we see the pencil in
-his hand."
-
-As this essay was written in consequence of the artist giving a
-pictured shape, it seems rather extraordinary that so good a logician
-as Mr. Wilkes should drag in Hogarth's pen merely to titter at, and
-acknowledge that he trembles at his pencil, which instrument, by the
-way, drew forth this paper:--
-
-"I will do him the justice to say, that he possesses the rare talent
-of gibbeting in colours, and that in most of his works he has been
-a very good moral satirist." That he has, it is most true. "His
-forte is there, and he should have kept it. When he has at any time
-deviated from his own peculiar walk, he has never failed to make
-himself perfectly ridiculous. I need only make my appeal to any one
-of his historical or portrait pieces, which are now considered as
-almost beneath all criticism."
-
-_Some_ of his portraits might have been exempted from this censure:
-what does Mr. Wilkes think of Captain Coram, now in the Foundling
-Hospital?
-
-"The favourite 'Sigismunda,' the labour of so many years, the boasted
-effort of his art, was not human. If the figure had a resemblance
-of anything ever on earth, or had the least pretence to meaning
-or expression, it was what he had seen, or perhaps made, in real
-life, his own wife in an agony of passion, but of what passion no
-connoisseur could guess."
-
-After asserting that the figure was not human, this is rather too
-much! From any gentleman, the daughter of Sir James Thornhill
-had a claim to more politeness; but that so gallant a man as
-Colonel Wilkes--a perfect knight-errant in all that related to the
-sex--should make an estimable and respectable woman a party "in the
-poor politics of the day, and descend to low personal abuse" (I use
-his own language), because her husband had in these poor politics
-adopted an opposite creed, excites astonishment!
-
-Had this transaction passed in the year 1791, instead of the year
-1762, it would have been less extraordinary; for, alas,
-
- "The days of chivalry are no more."[132]
-
-"All his friends remember what tiresome discourses were held by him,
-day after day, about the transcendent merit of this 'Sigismunda,' and
-how the great names of Raphael, Vandyke, and others, were made to
-yield the palm of beauty, grace, expression, etc. to him, for this
-long-laboured yet uninteresting single figure. The value he himself
-set on this, as well as on some other of his works, almost exceeds
-belief; yet from politeness, or fear, or some other motives, he has
-actually been paid the most astonishing sums, as the price, not of
-his merit, but of his unbounded vanity."
-
-That the artist demanded too high a price for his painting of
-"Sigismunda," I am free to acknowledge; but it has not been peculiar
-to Mr. Hogarth to mistake his talents, and overrate his worst
-performances. Mr. Wilkes must know that Milton, and many other great
-men, have erred in the same way. I do not think that "Sigismunda"
-was worth what he required; but that he has actually been paid the
-most astonishing sums for his other pictures, as the price, not
-of his merit, but of his unbounded vanity, I am yet to learn. The
-remuneration he received for many of his works is to be found in
-these volumes; it was seldom in any degree equal to their merits.
-The painter is no more, but several of his pictures remain; and were
-the "Marriage à la Mode," "Rake's Progress," etc., now upon sale,
-the present age would, I am persuaded, sanction my opinion, and the
-pictures produce much more astonishing sums than were originally paid
-to the artist.
-
-"He has succeeded very happily in the way of humour, and has
-miscarried in every other attempt; this has arisen in some measure
-from his head, but much more from his heart. After 'Marriage à la
-Mode,' the public wished for a series of prints of a Happy Marriage.
-Hogarth made the attempt; but the rancour and malevolence of his mind
-made him soon turn away with envy and disgust from objects of so
-pleasing contemplation, to dwell, and feast a bad heart, on others of
-a hateful cast, which he pursued, for he found them congenial, with
-the most unabating zeal and unrelenting gall."
-
-Should any one assert that the strength of colouring, and astonishing
-powers, which gave the name of Churchill so exalted a rank among
-satirists, originated in malevolence and rancour, and that he could
-not write a panegyric because he delighted in feasting a bad heart on
-a bad theme, Mr. Wilkes would, I am certain, be the first to defend
-him from such an aspersion.
-
-That he did not succeed in an attempt to delineate a Happy Marriage,
-I can readily believe. Hogarth was a painter of manners as they were,
-not as they ought to be. He considered nature in the abstract, and
-usually adhered to what he saw. Among those friends with whom Hogarth
-lived in habits of intimacy, and whose domestic situations he had the
-best opportunity of studying,--though Mr. Churchill and the Colonel
-were of the number,--he might not know a family from whence such a
-scene could be copied.
-
-"I have observed some time his setting sun. He has long been very
-dim, and almost shorn of his beams."
-
-For a confirmation of the above assertion, see the print of "The
-Medley," published this very year. My opinion of it the reader is
-already in possession of, and that opinion corresponds with an
-authority which, I believe, even Mr. Wilkes will consider as very
-high:--"For useful and deep satire, 'The Medley' is the most sublime
-of all Hogarth's works."--_Walpole._
-
-"He seems so conscious of this (_i.e._ that his sun is setting, etc.)
-that he now glimmers with borrowed light. 'John Bull's house in
-flames' has been hackneyed in fifty different prints; and if there is
-any merit in the figure on stilts, and the mob prancing around, it is
-not to be ascribed to Hogarth, but to Callot."
-
-Callot's was, I acknowledge, the first thought, but Sir Joshua
-Reynolds will tell Mr. Wilkes that happy appropriation is not
-plagiarism.
-
-"I own, too, that I am grieved to see the genius of Hogarth, which
-should take in all ages and countries, sunk to a level with the
-miserable tribe of party-etchers, and now in his rapid decline
-entering into the poor politics of the faction of the day, and
-descending into low personal abuse, instead of instructing the world,
-as he could once, by manly moral satire."
-
-I too am grieved that Hogarth, or any other man of talents, should
-descend to the poor politics of the faction of the day. But be it
-remarked, that this was the first political print he designed; and
-if so contemptible as it was before stated to be, it is rather
-singular that this one little satire, the first he engraved on the
-subject, and "destitute of every kind of original merit, in every
-part confused, perplexed, and embarrassed, where the story is not
-well told to the eye, and where we cannot discover the faintest ray
-of genius," should excite so warm a resentment.
-
-Mr. Wilkes goes on to ask, "Whence can proceed so surprising a
-change? Is it from the frowardness of old age? or is it that envy and
-impatience of resplendent merit in every way, at which he has always
-sickened? How often has he been remarked to droop at the fair and
-honest applause given even to a friend?" etc.
-
-I am told, by those who lived in habits of intimacy with Mr.
-Hogarth--never! But let us remember, that what is deemed fair and
-honest applause by the person who receives it, may by an impartial
-spectator be thought more than he is entitled to.
-
-"It is sufficient that the rest of mankind applaud; from that moment
-he begins the attack, and you never can be well with him, till he
-hears an universal outcry against you, and till all your friends have
-given you up."
-
-That Hogarth should have wished to render a man infamous in the eyes
-of society, before he would admit him to the honour of his regards,
-is a paradox I cannot solve. I believe this kind of preparation for
-friendship was never practised by any other person, of any age or
-country.
-
-"The public had never the least share of Hogarth's regard, or even
-goodwill. Gain and vanity have steered his little bark quite through
-life. He has never been consistent but with respect to these two
-principles."
-
-Hogarth was no hypocrite. By the word "public," is frequently meant
-that party who are immersed in the violent factions of the day. For
-them he never professed goodwill. But if by the public is meant
-society in its various branches and different ranks, almost all his
-works had as great a tendency to make the world wiser and better,
-as had those of men who made more violent professions. His little
-bark having been steered through life by gain and vanity, I hardly
-know how to understand. He lived a long and laborious life; he was
-admitted to be the first, the very first, in his walk; and died
-worth a sum that a Jew broker will acquire before breakfast. As to
-vanity,--of talents superior to any other artist,--he had a right to
-be vain.
-
-"But all genius was not born, nor will it die, with Mr. Hogarth;
-and notwithstanding all his ungenerous efforts to damp or chill it
-in another, I will trust to a discerning and liberal spirit in the
-English nation to patronize and reward all real merit. It will in the
-end rise superior to the idle laugh of the hour," etc.
-
-Of this discerning and liberal spirit there is not a stronger
-instance than the estimation in which Hogarth's works, not excepting
-the _Analysis_ (however it may be worded), are held thirty years
-after the publication of the _North Briton_.
-
-"In the year 1746, when the Guards were ordered to march to Finchley
-on the most important service they could be employed in,--the
-extinguishing a Scottish rebellion which threatened the entire
-ruin of the illustrious family on the throne, and, in consequence,
-of our liberties,--Mr. Hogarth came out with a print to make them
-ridiculous[133] to their countrymen, and to all Europe; or, perhaps,
-it rather was to tell the Scots, in his way, how little the Guards
-were to be feared, and that they might safely advance. That the
-ridicule might not stop here, and that it might be as offensive as
-possible to his own sovereign, he dedicated the print to the King of
-Prussia, as an encourager of arts. Is this patriotism? In old Rome,
-or in any of the Grecian States, he would have been punished as a
-profligate citizen, totally devoid of all principle."
-
-These are heavy charges; but mark how a plain tale shall put them
-down. From the effects which are described as likely to result from
-this most seditious print, we are tempted to think it must have
-been designed, etched, engraved, printed off, and dispersed with so
-much expedition as to arrive in Scotland before the Guards whom it
-holds up to ridicule; for one of its designs was "to tell the Scots,
-in his way, how little the Guards were to be feared, and that they
-might safely advance." The march was in 1746, and the publication
-of this print in 1750; therefore[134] it could not have these most
-direful and dangerous effects! That he dedicated it to the King of
-Prussia, as an encourager of arts, is true; but this dedication
-was not inserted until another had been rejected, because it was
-misunderstood by the King of England; and George the Second, with
-all his virtues, was neither a judge of humour nor an encourager of
-the arts. These premises granted, I think we may fairly draw this
-conclusion: Had old Hogarth been a citizen of old Rome, or a member
-of any of the Grecian States, and published such a representation
-of his own times, he would not have been punished as a profligate
-citizen: he would neither have been flagellated, impaled, decollated,
-nor thrown from the Tarpeian rock; but his print would have been
-laughed at by every member of the State who had the least ray of
-humour, though--as in some cases that we have seen--the length of a
-grave orator's beard might hide the risible emotions of his muscles,
-and the amplitude of his robe conceal the shaking of his sides.
-
-To detail the conclusion of this paper, about the dishonour of
-his being appointed pannel-painter to the King, never suffered to
-caricature any of the royal family, etc., is scarcely necessary.
-If the appointment was less respectable than his merits demanded,
-the disgrace did not fall upon him; but be it remarked, that the
-office was afterwards held by Sir Joshua Reynolds; and however
-elevated his taste, however superior his talents, his genius was long
-distinguished and admired by the public before he had the honour of
-taking the portraits of their Majesties.
-
-Trusting that Hogarth's own works will sufficiently ascertain his
-character, I shall not attempt his further vindication, but proceed
-to the print.
-
-A globe, which must here be considered as the world, though it
-appears to be no more than a tavern sign, is represented on fire,
-and Mr. Pitt, exalted on stilts, which are held by the surrounding
-multitude, blowing up the flames with a pair of large bellows.[135]
-His attendants are composed of butchers, with marrow-bones and
-cleavers, an hallooing mob armed with clubs, and a trio of London
-aldermen in the act of adoration. From the neck of this idol of
-the populace is suspended a millstone, on which is inscribed
-£3000 per annum, allusive to his pension, and intimating that so
-ponderous a load must in time sink his popularity.[136] While he
-is thus increasing the conflagration, a number of Highlanders,[137]
-grenadiers, sailors, etc., are busily working a fire-engine to
-extinguish it. The pipe is guided by a Union Office fireman at the
-top. Defended by an iron cap, and decorated with a badge inscribed
-"G. R.," this intrepid engineer pays no regard to three streams of
-water which are furiously driven at his rear from the windows of the
-Temple Coffeehouse. The Liliputian engines, through which these tiny
-showers descend, are directed by a nobleman and two garretteers. An
-inscription over the door determines the title of the former, who
-is delineated without features: the two gentlemen in the attic were,
-I believe, originally intended for Mr. Wilkes and Mr. Churchill, but
-previous to publication the faces were altered.[138] A surplice is
-still left on the figure over Lord Temple, and the Colonel's coat
-is lapelled. Upon a sign-iron beneath them is a slaughterman,[139]
-with a lighted candle in his hat, and a large knife in his pocket;
-thus intimating that he is ready either to fire a city or murder a
-citizen. Mounted to the situation he now occupies by a ladder, he
-is drawing up a sign of the Patriot's Arms, and in this good work
-is assisted by two strong-sinewed coadjutors, who are dragging the
-ropes to which it is suspended. The blazonry is four clenched fists
-in opposition to each other; the date, 1762.[140] This curious
-delineation will be placed in the front of the Temple Coffeehouse,
-for _the world to wonder at_. The Newcastle Arms, nearly broken
-down, bears allusion to the Duke's resignation.[141] A Highlander,
-carrying two buckets of water from the fire-plug to the engine,
-is likely to be impeded by a fellow with a wheelbarrow full of
-political papers, which are intended to feed the flames. This type
-of the distressed poet, said to be intended as a representative of
-the Duke of Newcastle, endeavours to overset the Scot, and burst the
-engine-pipe by the same operation.
-
-Wholly engrossed by avarice, the crafty Dutchman, with a hand in
-each pocket and a pipe in his mouth, sits on his bales of goods, and
-laughs at the destruction raging around him. A fox, fair emblem of
-his cunning, is creeping out of a kennel beneath.
-
-Close to him is a patriotic trumpeter, blowing the spirit-stirring
-tube, and pointing to a show-cloth, on which is painted a wild
-Indian. By the magisterial robe in which this trumpeter is arrayed,
-and the city arms on the banner of his windy instrument, he is
-decisively intended to personify Mr. Alderman Beckford, thrice Lord
-Mayor of London. Beneath the savage to whom he points, is written,
-"Alive from America." This grotesque figure is placed before two
-tobacco hogsheads, grasps in each hand a purse inscribed "£1000,"
-and has tied round him, so as to form a sort of Indian dress, eight
-or ten little bags equally well filled. His countenance leads us to
-judge that he delights in the devastation by which he is a gainer;
-and seems to imply that our American brethren, like our Amsterdam
-allies, were eager to furnish friend or foe with the product of their
-respective countries. It may further intimate the Alderman's immense
-riches, and that a leading article of his trade was tobacco.
-
-A table clock, inscribed "Airs by Harrington," representing a company
-of soldiers in a regular march, has an evident allusion to the
-military doctrine of man being a machine. "The Norfolk jig, G. T.
-_fecit_," hints at the Norfolk Militia, and Mr. George Townshend, who
-paid unremitting attention to the discipline and appearance of the
-corps raised in Norfolk.
-
-"The Post Office," painted on a cracked board fastened against the
-wall, may possibly signify the office of Postmaster-General being
-then divided.[142]
-
-In the opposite corner of the print, surrounded by his miserable
-and famished subjects, sits the heroic Frederick of Prussia.
-Regardless of their distress, and unmoved by their cries, tears, and
-execrations--like Nero, who fiddled while Rome burnt--he is lost to
-every feeling, except those which arise from the fine tones of his
-Cremona. The effects resulting from his insatiable thirst of glory
-are not confined to his own subjects. Fired by vaulting ambition,
-he scatters destruction through surrounding states; depopulates
-provinces, and lays waste kingdoms, to prove himself--a philosopher.
-
-How far the rest of the figures in this group may refer to particular
-persons or nations, I cannot determine. The female, with clasped
-hands and eyes raised to heaven, has been supposed to be intended for
-the Empress Queen; a venerable matron, stealing away with a trunk
-under her arm, for the late Empress of Russia, Frederick's most
-inveterate enemy, who ended her earthly reign on the 2d of January
-1762. They may be so intended, though I must acknowledge I do not
-discover anything which will wholly establish the supposition, but am
-more inclined to consider them as merely exemplifying the horrors of
-war.
-
-The _fleur-de-lis_ hung from one of the houses in flames, and the
-black eagle from the other, sufficiently indicate the powers intended
-to be pointed out. The sign of the Salutation alludes to the treaty
-between France and Spain, for the dexter figure is Louis Baboon; and
-the sinister, Lord Strut.
-
-The flames rage with so much violence as to prevent the fluttering
-dove from alighting on any of the buildings; notwithstanding which,
-this bird of peace, with an olive branch, hovers over them in the
-midst of ascending smoke.
-
-The exact point of time is determined by the waggon, inscribed
-"Hermione," in the background.[143]
-
-Such is my general idea of the preceding plate;[144] there may be
-those who will discover many things which I do not see, and which
-possibly never entered into the contemplation of the artist. As the
-whole alludes to the politics of his own day, all the characters
-introduced were his contemporaries, and several of them had been
-his intimate friends, he might intentionally leave some parts
-obscure;[145] or conceiving his meaning sufficiently obvious to those
-who lived at the time, forget that it would become impervious to
-posterity.
-
-I have before observed that in allegory he was not happy; and the
-dissimilar combinations here brought together are a proof of the
-assertion. Soldiers and sailors, whose business it is to increase
-the flames of war, carrying water to extinguish them, is not quite
-consonant to our general ideas of their dispositions. Highlanders,
-being universally considered as the soldiers of Europe, make but an
-awkward appearance in the character of peacemakers.
-
-A sign of the globe on fire, flames bursting out of the Globe Tavern
-and three other buildings, with each an alehouse sign, to explain
-what nations are meant, borders upon the bathos. Another nation
-personified by the sovereign fiddling to his expiring subjects,
-is not a bad thought, but here it is incongruous. It has not that
-general unison with the other parts of the picture which either
-writing or painting demands. Separated from the accompaniments,
-this group might have made a good print; with the Globe Tavern, the
-Temple Coffeehouse, the garretteers, and the aldermen, it does not
-assimilate.
-
-My last remark I shall take the liberty of borrowing from Mr. Wilkes,
-for in this one point I have the honour of agreeing with him: "The
-print is too much crowded with figures."
-
-
-PLATE II.
-
- "The Times are out of joint."
-
-[Illustration: THE TIMES. PLATE II.]
-
-A painter engaging in the political disputes of his day, is in a
-situation similar to a gentleman beginning to rebuild a family
-mansion. The pencil of one, dipped in these troubled streams, or the
-fingers of the other but touch-brick and mortar,--it is not in the
-tables of De Moivre to calculate the conclusion of their labours.
-Each of them sets out upon a certain plan, determines that he will go
-so far, and no further: but the gentleman is induced to make a first
-addition to his original plan, because it will be more convenient; a
-second, because it will be _magnifique_; and a third and fourth _must
-be_, because without them the building will not be uniform.
-
-The artist engraves a political print, which raises an host of
-enemies, who buzz about him like a nest of disturbed hornets. To
-them, wording not being the painter's province, he replies by a
-second print, which produces a second volume of abuse; "another and
-another still succeeds," and he must either sink under this load of
-obloquy, or devote the residue of his days to the defence of his
-character. Such at least was the political progress of Hogarth.
-
-By his first print of "The Times" he roused two very formidable
-adversaries, and they treated him with as much ceremony as two
-deputies from the Bow Street magistrates would an incendiary or
-an assassin. They did not consider him as a man whose conduct it
-was needful to investigate, or whose opinions it was necessary to
-confute, but as a criminal, whose aggravated crimes had outraged
-every law of society, and whom they would therefore drag to the place
-of execution. To defend himself from these furious assailants,
-he had no shield but a copperplate, no weapons but a pencil and a
-burin. The use he made of them may be seen in the two last prints;
-but though this was engraved during the time of the contest, it was
-not published while he lived. Whether a sudden change in politics, a
-supposed ambiguity in part of his design, or the advice of judicious
-or timid friends, induced him to suppress his work, cannot now be
-ascertained; but whatever were the reasons, his widow's respect for
-his memory induced her to adopt the same conduct. She retained a
-reverence for even the dust of her husband, and dreaded its being
-raked from the sepulchre where he had been quietly inurned, mixed
-with the poisonous aconite of party, and by sacrilegious hands
-cast into the agitated cauldron of politics. If we add to this the
-specimen of political candour which she had experienced in her own
-person, can we wonder that she cautiously avoided whatever could be
-tortured into a provocation to the renewal of hostilities? From these
-considerations she never suffered more than one impression to be
-taken, and that was struck off at the earnest request of Lord Exeter.
-
-In withholding this plate from the public she acted prudently; in
-attempting to describe it, I may be thought to act otherwise. To
-enter into a discrimination of characters who now live, "or step upon
-ashes which are not yet cold," is liable to invidious construction.
-Let it be remembered, that though I have endeavoured to point out
-the characters delineated by Hogarth, it does not follow that my
-explanation will always be right.
-
-Though several of the figures are marked in a style so obtrusive that
-they cannot be mistaken, there are others where I can only guess at
-the originals. From those who were engaged in the politics of that
-day I have sought information, but their communications have been
-neither important nor consistent with each other. They generally
-ended in an acknowledgment, that "in thirty years they had forgotten
-much which they once knew, and which, if now recollected, would
-materially elucidate." To this was added what I am compelled to
-admit, that parts of the print are obscure. I have before observed
-that neither politics nor allegory were Hogarth's _forte_, and this
-delineation was made under the impression of resentment.
-
-The exact time of its being engraved I cannot positively ascertain,
-but conjecture it must have been some time in the year 1762. A small
-part of the sky was left unfinished, and in that state still remains,
-as the present proprietors would not suffer any other engraver to
-draw a line on the copperplate of Hogarth.
-
-On a pedestal in the centre of the print is a statue of the present
-King in his coronation robes, inscribed "A Ramsay delt;" his right
-hand is placed on his side, and the left leans upon a plummet,
-which seems to have been Mr. Ramsay's guide in the delineation;
-for the drapery is in squares, decided as the ground glass stopper
-of a decanter, and the whole figure is composed of straight lines.
-Of these upright figures Hogarth had given his opinion in the
-_Analysis_;[146] and Mr. Ramsay being portrait-painter to his
-Majesty, a post Hogarth thought himself better qualified to fill, he
-took this opportunity of throwing his manner into ridicule.[147] The
-head of a lion in _bas relief_ with a leaden pipe in his mouth,[148]
-being on the front of the pedestal, intimates its connection with a
-reservoir; and the royal statue on the top denotes this to be the
-fountain of honour. The able-bodied figure turning a fire-plug is
-evidently intended for Lord Bute; his employment seems to intimate
-that he has the power of accelerating or retarding the stream of
-royal bounty, and wheresoever he willeth it shall flow, there it
-floweth. A baronial escutcheon, keys, stars, coronets, croziers,
-mitres, maces, lie close to the pedestal, around which are placed a
-number of garden pots with shrubs. Two rose trees most plentifully
-sprinkled by streams from the fountain of favour have been originally
-inscribed "James III.;" but James being now blotted out, George is
-put above it, and by a little hyphen beneath the lowest figure,
-marked as belonging to the lowest line. Three orange trees have the
-initials "G. R.," and beneath the letters is inscribed "Republican."
-These also receive drops of favour; but a large laurel planted in
-a capacious vase, raised upon the base of a pillar, and inscribed
-"Culloden," is watered by the dew of heaven,--by a copious shower
-poured from the urn of Aquarius. Besides these six flourishing
-plants, there are a number of yew and box trees, clipped into true
-taste by a Dutch gardener. Some of them retain their old situations,
-but an active labourer is busily clearing the grounds of all these
-ancient formalities. Many of them he has already wheeled out of their
-places, and thrown into the ditch that surrounds the platform, into
-which situation he is now tumbling two venerable box trees of a most
-orderly and regular cut: each of them having the letters G. R., may
-apply to the favourites either of George the First or Second. This
-I suppose is meant to express, by an allegorical figure, the great
-number of old place-men who resigned on the accession of his present
-Majesty.
-
-The late Henry Fox, afterwards Lord Holland, being at that time a
-leading character in the House of Commons, and deemed the partisan of
-Lord Bute, is here represented as removing these antiquated plants
-from the vivifying hothouse of royalty to the cold and dank ditch of
-despair. Hogarth, not thinking a sable countenance and ebon eyebrows
-would sufficiently indicate the person meant, has given the outline
-of a fox's head to his cap. In his reforming business he is somewhat
-impeded by a garden roller, on which is written "£1,000,000,000,"
-meaning possibly the national debt. On the platform lies a broom,
-shovel, and rake, necessary implements in clearing gardens; and in
-the surrounding _fosse_ such a collection of fantastic _nevergreens_,
-as decked the pleasure-grounds of our ancient sovereigns, "trimm'd
-with nice art," and cut into the shapes of pyramids, fortifications,
-globes, and birds. On one of them, clipped into the form of a human
-head, is a mask, well expressing the taste of our ancestors.
-
-It is observable that Lord Bute and Mr. Henry Fox are the only
-persons on the platform: one of these gentlemen was, I believe,
-supposed to have the highest confidence of his sovereign; and the
-other, a most powerful influence over the people's representatives.
-
-A group in the dexter corner is principally made up of members of
-the Upper House. A senatorial figure in the chair under the king's
-arms is intended for Sir John Cust, then Speaker. That beneath him,
-wiping his forehead, evidently from perturbation of mind, for William
-Duke of Cumberland. Below him is Lord Mansfield, and still lower Lord
-Temple, presenting his snuff-box to his Grace of Newcastle, who had
-a short time before joined the opposition. We also recognise Earl
-Winchelsea, and George Doddington, afterwards Lord Melcombe.
-
-Who are intended to be hinted at by a number of persons asleep, I
-do not know: it, however, proves that there were at that period men
-who were not to be kept awake by the most important interests of
-their country. Had this print borne relation to the orators of 1790
-instead of the speakers of 1762, there would have been no cause for
-astonishment. Considering the hour at which our present race of
-senators meet to do business, and that one oration frequently lasts
-from the twilight of evening to the crowing of the cock, could it
-excite wonder if half the assembly were under the dominion of Somnus
-before what one of our fashionable prints so familiarly calls the
-peroration?
-
-On the other side of a rail, intended, I believe, to divide the
-Commons from the Lords, are a number of figures firing at the
-emblem of Peace, which is fluttering in the air near the signs of
-the zodiac. Mr. Pitt we are enabled to identify, not only by his
-features, but by his gouty legs. His gun has much the longest barrel,
-and while he fires it off he prudently turns away his face, fearing
-a flash in the pan may scorch his eyebrows; or perhaps acting as a
-waterman, looking one way and rowing another. A figure behind him
-discharges a blunderbuss; and in the sinister hand of one immediately
-before him is a horse-pistol. The household artillery of all the
-band (and from the smoke which is diffused over the centre of the
-group it appears they are numerous) is directed to the same object.
-One prudent personage, a little before Mr. Pitt, seems to be in the
-act of desertion; for though yet seated on the gunpowder bench, he
-has got his head under the rail, and is half on the other side. This
-may be pointed at one of that class who go under the denomination
-of Trimmers, or may intimate that the gentleman is in the way of
-getting a place or a peerage; but what is his name, or was his future
-title, I am not enough read in the red book[149] to determine. The
-next figure resembles Henry Bilson Legge. A hand with an ear-trumpet
-may perhaps allude to Lord Chesterfield, whose deafness was at this
-period proverbial. Two figures above him are distinguished, one by
-a muff, and the other by a pair of spectacles; "to whom related,
-or by whom begot," baffles my conjecture: the lowest figure has a
-resemblance to the first Lord Holland, but _he_ is exhibited on the
-platform. A dog immediately behind Lord Bute, having his eye fixed
-on the urn of Aquarius, I suppose to be barking at the shower which
-pours on the laurel inscribed "Culloden." He is a Caledonian cur,
-and on his collar is written the word "Mercy," allusive, perhaps, to
-the cruelties said to have been exercised in Scotland in 1745, which
-accounts for the natives of that country thinking the Duke had more
-liberal rewards and more distinguished honours than he fairly merited.
-
-Thus much must suffice for the dignified personages who then drove
-the state machine: to regret that I cannot point out more of the
-characters would be useless. I am not deeply studied in the political
-history of that day; to those who are, must be delegated the task of
-more particular explanation.
-
-The two most distinguished persons in the opposite group are exalted
-to the pillory. Over a figure of Fanny the Phantom, who is dressed
-in a white sheet, the engraver has written "Conspiracy." In one
-hand she holds a small hammer, and in the other a lighted taper,
-with which she sets fire to a _North Briton_ that is fastened on the
-breast of Esquire Wilkes, above whose head is written "Defamation."
-The patriot is depicted with a most rueful countenance and empty
-pockets. On the steps below are such a company as we generally see
-assembled on these great occasions. Two Highlanders, one of whom is
-grasping a purse, and with most significant grin pointing to the
-_profane cheeld_ who had dared to abuse his clan, and reprinted
-Howell's _Description of Scotland_:[150] by his belt and lapels he
-appears to be military, and is perhaps meant for Colonel Martin.
-Close to him is a Liliputian chimney-sweeper, and a fellow blowing
-a cow's horn with force that gives a Boreas-like distension to his
-cheeks.[151] This resounding clangour is softened by the cheering
-notes of the sweet-sounding violin, while the growling bagpipe gives
-a thorough bass to the whole. Still further to keep up the spirits
-of the company, a woman is retailing gin from a keg inscribed with
-the two initials "J. W.," and a schoolboy amusing himself, _à la
-Teniers_, with Mr. Wilkes' shoes. To complete his degradation, the
-Bishop's Abigail so skilfully trundles her well-soaked mop, that he
-enjoys the full benefit of her mud-coloured drops.
-
-The group behind is partly made up of British sailors and soldiers,
-each of whom exhibit a most melancholy spectacle of the fortune of
-war. One lion-hearted veteran, having had both legs and arms lopped
-off in the service of his country, has his oak-like trunk borne to
-the borders of the platform upon a porter's knot,[152] where, with
-three other disabled warriors, he waits in the hope of catching a
-few drops from the fountain of honour; but alas! the stream which
-ascends from a fire-plug behind the gate falls on the heads of a mob
-who are in the background. Some of these may possibly be cripples,
-for a crutch as well as several bludgeons is flourished in the air.
-At a window, over which is painted "Dr. Cant's," and "Man Midwife," a
-bishop is confirming two adults by the imposition of hands. Whether
-by this representation the artist intended to hint that this father
-of the church confirmed them in their political errors, the reader
-must determine according to his political creed; but thus far we
-may venture to decide, Doctor Thomas Seeker, then Archbishop of
-Canterbury, was the person intended to be delineated. At the rooms
-where the Society for Encouragement of Arts, Manufactures, and
-Commerce then met, a number of persons, by the help of a crane, are
-dragging up a large silver palette, on which is written "Premium."
-The man instructing the workmen is, I believe, intended for Mr. Peter
-Templeman, then Secretary to the Society; as one of the figures in
-the first floor is probably Lord Romney, then their President.
-
-Behind this we discover the New Church in the Strand; and on
-the opposite side a triumphal column; a structure with the word
-"Hospital" inscribed on the front, and a scaffolding, with workmen
-completing a very large new building. These, I apprehend, Hogarth
-intended as descriptive of the great things which were to be
-undertaken and carried on during the reign of a monarch who gloried
-in the name of Briton. That the workmen and scaffolding bear allusion
-to those extensive and ponderous premises now known by the name of
-Somerset Place, there can be little doubt: the artist, with an eye
-of prophetic anticipation, has placed his scaffolding nearly on the
-spot where the building now stands;[153] and conscious of the time it
-must take to pile up such a quantity of stone, has not represented it
-built, but building.
-
-The figure of Lord Bute is a strong likeness, and in the turn of head
-very similar to Ramsay's portrait which Mr. Ryland engraved. Pointing
-out the first Lord Holland by making the outline of his cap in the
-form of a fox's head, is a whimsical idea. Even the sculptured lion's
-shaggy front has strong markings. He is by no means pleased with the
-distribution of those honours that he is made a party in bestowing,
-but goes through his business with a very wry face. To the poor
-maimed sailors and soldiers, Callot could not have given much more
-spirit. Though upon so small a scale, they have all the hardihood
-of their order; and both in them and the elevated party[154] on the
-opposite side, variety and distinction of character is accurately and
-nicely discriminated.
-
-
-
-
-JOHN WILKES, ESQ.
-
- _Drawn from the Life, and etched in aquafortis, by William
- Hogarth. Published according to Act of Parliament, May 16, 1763._
-
- "Enough of Patriots,--all I ask of man
- Is only to be honest as he can.
- Some have deceiv'd, and some may still deceive,
- 'Tis the fool's curse at random to believe.
- Would those who, by opinion plac'd on high,
- Stand fair and perfect in their country's eye,
- Maintain that honour,--let me in their ear
- Hint this essential doctrine--PERSEVERE."
-
- --CHURCHILL.
-
-[Illustration: JOHN WILKES ESQ^R.]
-
-
-The bitter satire upon Hogarth's domestic habits, talents, taste,
-originality, and orthography, which has been before noticed, would
-have discomposed a less irritable man, and warranted any retaliation
-in the power of the pencil; but he seems to have felt little
-uneasiness, and under a conviction that the overcharged blunderbuss
-which had been aimed at him had burst in the explosion and wounded
-his assailant more than himself, did not think it necessary to
-point fire-arms at an adversary whose intemperate zeal had defeated
-his avowed purpose. Under the influence of these impressions, the
-artist has not attempted to be severe; nor can I comprehend upon
-what ground this plate has been denominated a satire, for it is not
-a caricature, but a very accurate and striking resemblance, with the
-identical accompaniments which I most firmly believe Mr. Wilkes would
-at that time have chosen as the decorations of his portrait. The cap
-of liberty, "Heaven-descended, godlike liberty," above his head, and
-two political papers which he acknowledged himself to have written,
-on his right hand. One of these papers is marked with that memorable
-number, which was in its day a kind of shibboleth to the party.[156]
-On the same table with the two _North Britons_ is a pen and ink,
-importing that the person delineated is an author, a character the
-Colonel could hardly be ashamed of. These premises granted to the
-artist,--and
-
- "The very head and front of his offending
- Hath this extent, no more,"--
-
-what crime has he committed? He has given an engraving, which cannot
-indeed be considered as a compliment, because it is not a flattering
-likeness; but I do not see why it should have been received as a
-sarcasm. If we add to this the time when, and place where, it was
-taken; if we consider how glorious the situation!--how interesting
-the moment!--it is delineating a general at the instant of victory;
-and so far from bearing any marks of satire, that it might be almost
-mistaken for a panegyric. To say the truth, though his friend
-Churchill has thrown the picture into shadow, and given only the dark
-tints, Mr. Wilkes seemed willing enough to receive it as such;[157]
-and I am informed, frequently told his friends that he every day
-grew into a stronger resemblance. The pleasant and philosophic
-indifference with which he spoke of it at the time, did honour to
-his good humour and his good sense. He declared himself very little
-concerned about the case of his soul, as he was only tenant for life,
-and that the best apology for his person was, that he did not make
-himself.[158]
-
-Such was the style of Mr. Wilkes. As to Mr. Churchill, his temper
-must have forsaken him; and every circumstance taken into the
-account, when describing this transaction, he seems to have forgotten
-that satire ought to be at least seasoned with truth. Brilliant
-diction, animated verse, and high-sounding words, are very apt to
-impose. Churchill's is a muse of fire, and dazzles the eye like the
-sun in its meridian splendour; it fascinates the mind, and carries
-the most sober reason into the airy regions of imagination. This
-considered, before I insert his bitter satire, it will be but fair to
-give a candid and dispassionate relation of that which provoked it.
-
-When Mr. Wilkes was the second time brought from the Tower to
-Westminster Hall, and had in one day an honourable acquittal, an
-universal acclamation, and a proud triumph, Mr. Hogarth attended in
-the court of Common Pleas, and, as was his constant custom, carried
-a port-crayon in his pocket. Surrounded by a crowd of spectators,
-who came to see how the cause would terminate, he took a portrait
-of Mr. Wilkes: delineated a patriot at the moment when he was in
-his own person asserting the cause of liberty, and by his own trial
-ascertaining the law of his country. But, replies an advocate for
-Mr. Wilkes, "Hogarth certainly intended to make a caricature."[159]
-To this I have no other answer than pointing to the print, which,
-being compared with the original, will prove to every dispassionate
-inquirer what it is my wish to establish, _i.e._ that it has been
-mistaken for a caricature, from the world knowing the provocation
-which Hogarth had previously received, and which every man felt would
-have justified the most severe retaliation.
-
-What! Consider it as a satire to hand down to posterity a patriot at
-the moment of inspiration! "While every breast caught the holy flame
-of liberty, and all his fellow-citizens were animated in his cause,
-for they knew it to be their own cause, that of their country, and
-of its laws. It was declared to be so a few hours afterwards by the
-unanimous sentence of the Judges of that Court; and they were all
-present."
-
-From the style in which the bard relates this transaction, a plain
-reader would be tempted to think that Hogarth had stolen into
-Westminster Hall with a quiver full of poisoned arrows hung to his
-girdle, and, like a murderous ruffian, hid himself behind the arras,
-that he might seize the first opportunity of assassinating this
-paragon of patriotism.
-
- "When Wilkes, our countryman, our common friend,
- Arose, his king, his country to defend;
- When tools of power he bar'd to public view,
- And from their holes the sneaking cowards drew;
- When Rancour found it far beyond her reach,
- To soil his honour, and his truth impeach,--
- What could induce thee, at a time and place
- Where manly foes had blush'd to show their face,
- To make that effort which must damn thy name,
- And sink thee deep, deep in the grave with shame!
- Did Virtue move thee? no, 'twas pride, rank pride,
- And if thou hadst not done it, thou hadst died.
- Malice (who, disappointed of her end,
- Whether to work the bane of foe or friend,
- Preys on herself, and driven to the stake,
- Gives virtue that revenge she scorns to take)
- Had killed thee, tottering on life's utmost verge,
- Had Wilkes and Liberty escaped thy scourge.
- "When that great charter which our fathers bought
- With their best blood, was into question brought;
- When big with ruin, o'er each English head,
- Vile Slavery hung suspended by a thread;
- When Liberty, all trembling and aghast,
- Fear'd for the future, knowing what was past;
- When every breast was chill'd with deep despair,
- Till reason pointed out that PRATT was there.
- Lurking most ruffian-like behind a screen,
- So plac'd all things to see, himself unseen,
- Virtue with due contempt saw[160] Hogarth stand,
- The murderous pencil in his palsied hand.
- What was the cause of Liberty to him,
- Or what was Honour! let them sink or swim,
- So he may gratify without control,
- The mean resentments of his selfish soul,
- Let Freedom perish, if, to Freedom true,
- In the same ruin Wilkes may perish too."
-
-This animated and high-coloured rhapsody, beautiful and fervid as it
-is, when reduced to plain prose, ends in Liberty, Virtue, and Honour
-being all aghast, because Hogarth took Mr. Wilkes' portrait without
-the customary fee! But my readers may be weary of the subject.
-Enough--
-
- "Enough of Wilkes,--to good and honest men
- His actions speak much stronger than my pen."
-
- --CHURCHILL.
-
-[Illustration: (end of chapter floral icon)]
-
-
-
-
-THE BRUISER, CHARLES CHURCHILL (ONCE THE REVEREND),
-
- _In the Character of a Russian Hercules, regaling himself after
- having killed the Monster Caricatura, that so sorely galled his
- virtuous friend, the heaven-born Wilkes.--Published Aug. 1, 1763._
-
- "But he had a club,
- This dragon to drub,
- Or he had ne'er don't, I warrant ye."
-
- --_Dragon of Wantley._
-
-[Illustration: THE REV. C. CHURCHILL.]
-
-
-Enraged by the publication of Mr. Wilkes' portrait, Mr. Charles
-Churchill drew his gray goose quill, and wrote a most virulent and
-vindictive satire, which he entitled _An Epistle to William Hogarth_.
-The painter might be a very good Christian, but he was not blest with
-that meek forbearance which induces those who are smote on one cheek
-to turn the other also. He was an old man, but did not wish to be
-considered as that feeble, superannuated, helpless animal which the
-poet had described. He scarcely wished to live
-
- "After his flame lack'd oil, to be the snuff
- Of younger spirits."
-
-Apprehensive that the public might construe his delaying a reply to
-proceed from inability, he did not wait the tedious process of a new
-plate, but took a piece of copper on which he had, in the year 1749,
-engraven a portrait of himself and dog, erased his own head, and in
-the place of it introduced the divine with a tattered band and torn
-ruffles,--"No Lord's anointed, but a Russian bear."
-
-In this I must acknowledge there was more ill-nature than wit.[161]
-It is rather caricature than character, and more like the coarse
-mangling of Tom Browne than the delicate yet wounding satire of
-Alexander Pope. For this rough retort he might, however, plead
-the poet's precedent. His opponent had brandished a tomahawk; and
-Hogarth, old as he was, wielded a battle-axe in his own defence. A
-more aggravated provocation cannot well be conceived. The attack was
-unmerciful, unmanly, unjust. Let the following extracts speak for
-themselves:--
-
- "Amongst the sons of men, how few are known
- Who dare be just to merit not their own!
- Superior virtue and superior sense,
- To knaves and fools will always give offence:
- Nay, men of real worth can scarcely bear--
- So nice is jealousy--a rival there."
-
-Such is the introduction to Churchill's Epistle, and I believe the
-reader will grant that it is quite as applicable to the poet as the
-painter. After some lines which would apply to any other subject as
-well as that under consideration, he thus proceeds:
-
- "Hogarth,--I take thee, Candour, at thy word,
- Accept thy proffer'd terms, and will be heard;
- Thee have I heard with virulence declaim,
- Nothing retained of Candour but the name;
- By thee have I been charg'd in angry strains,[162]
- With that mean falsehood which my soul disdains."
-
-How furious the onset! but if the lines are brought back to plain
-prose, they will run thus: "Hogarth, thy word is candour. I adopt
-the same word, and having heard _thee_ declaim with a virulence that
-retained nothing of candour but the name, thou shalt hear me declaim
-in the same style."
-
-That this is the precise meaning which the poet intended, I will not
-presume to assert; but that he has pursued his theme in a manner that
-amply justifies my supposition, the following lines will abundantly
-prove:--
-
- "Hogarth, stand forth,--nay, hang not thus aloof,
- Now Candour, now thou shalt receive such proof,
- Such damning proof, that henceforth thou shalt fear
- To tax my wrath, and own my conduct clear.
- Hogarth, stand forth,--I dare thee to be try'd
- In that great court where Conscience must preside:
- At that most solemn bar hold up thy hand;
- Think before whom, on what account you stand.
- Speak, but consider well--from first to last
- Review thy life, view every action past:
- Nay, you shall have no reason to complain,--
- Take longer time, and view them o'er again:
- Canst thou remember from thy earliest youth,--
- And as thy God must judge thee, speak the truth,--
- A single instance where, self laid aside,
- And justice taking place of fear and pride,
- Thou with an equal eye didst genius view,
- And give to merit what was merit's due?
- Genius and merit are a sure offence,
- And thy soul sickens at the name of sense."
-
-If Hogarth had so marked an aversion to all genius, merit, and sense,
-it is rather singular that he should have lived on such intimate
-terms with Mr. Churchill and Mr. Wilkes.
-
- "Is any one so foolish to succeed?
- On Envy's altar he is doomed to bleed.
- Hogarth, a guilty pleasure in his eyes,
- The place of executioner supplies:
- See how he gloats, enjoys the sacred feast,
- And proves himself by cruelty a priest."
-
-What does the bard prove himself?
-
- "Whilst the weak artist to thy whims a slave,
- Would bury all those powers which nature gave,
- Would suffer blank concealment to obscure
- Those rays that jealousy could not endure;
- To feed thy vanity would rust unknown,
- And to secure thy credit, blast his own:
- In Hogarth he was sure to find a friend;
- He could not fear, and therefore might commend.
- But when his spirit, rous'd by honest shame,
- Shook off that lethargy, and soar'd to fame;
- When with the pride of man resolv'd and strong,
- He scorn'd those fears which did his honour wrong;
- And on himself determin'd to rely,
- Brought forth his labours to the public eye,
- No friend in thee could such a rebel know,
- He had desert, and Hogarth was his foe."
-
-He must be a very weak artist indeed who would bury the talents which
-Nature gave, to gratify the whims of another man; but admitting a
-painter had been found "who suffered blank concealment to obscure
-those rays which jealousy could not endure," I cannot comprehend how
-it concerned Hogarth. His walk was all his own: even now he need not
-dread a rival there. Mr. Churchill acknowledges that in walks of
-humour
-
- "Hogarth unrivall'd stands, and shall engage
- Unrivall'd praise to the most distant age!"
-
-Being unrivalled, I do not see why he should dread a rival; nor can
-I conceive he could be jealous of talents which he must be conscious
-were inferior to his own.
-
-After some very harsh lines on envy, in no degree applicable to
-Hogarth, and the rhapsody about Wilkes and Liberty, which I have
-noticed in the preceding plate, this high priest of the Temple of
-Cruelty, rejoicing in his strength and triumphing in the pride of his
-youth, without any reverence for gray hairs or respect for superior
-talents, sets up the war-whoop, and springs upon a feeble old man
-with the ferocity of a hungry cannibal:
-
- "With all the symptoms of assur'd decay,
- With age and sickness pinch'd and worn away,
- Pale quivering lips, lank cheeks, and faltering tongue,
- The spirits out of tune, the nerves unstrung,
- The body shrivell'd up, the dim eyes sunk
- Within their sockets deep; the weak hams shrunk,
- The body's weight unable to sustain,
- The stream of life scarce trembling through the vein:
- More than half kill'd by honest truths which fell,
- Through thy own fault, from men who wish'd thee well;
- Canst thou e'en thus thy thoughts to vengeance give,
- And dead to all things else, to malice live?
- Hence, dotard, to thy closet; shut thee in,
- By deep repentance wash away thy sin;
- From haunts of men, to shame and sorrow fly,
- And on the verge of death learn how to die."
-
-That a man in the vigour of life--for Churchill was not much more
-than thirty years old--should draw so pitiable a picture of age
-and decrepitude, and then attack that age and decrepitude with a
-barbarity so savage, is horrible! But the baleful spirit of party
-overthrows the barriers of truth, eradicates philanthropy, and severs
-those social, I had almost said sacred, bonds which ought to unite
-and attach men of genius to each other. Had Churchill felt his own
-beautiful apostrophe, he would have blotted the lines with his tears:
-
- "Ah! let not youth to insolence allied,
- In heat of blood, in full career of pride,
- Possessed of genius, with unhallowed rage,
- Mock the infirmities of reverend age.
- The greatest genius to this fate may bow."
-
- --_Churchill's Epistle to Hogarth._
-
-After advising the painter to learn how to die, the bard proceeds;
-repeats and amplifies what he had before written on Hogarth's envy,
-gives a metrical version of that _North Briton_ which ridicules the
-artist's love of flattery, and beautifully versifies Mr. Wilkes'
-prosaic abuse of poor "Sigismunda."
-
-In the lines which follow, he first throws the gauntlet, and then
-draws such a picture of the man he has challenged as must have
-subdued the rancour of an assassin; so far from being a stimulus to
-revenge, it excites pity, and concludes in the form of an apology:
-
- "For me, who, warm and zealous for my friend,
- In spite of railing thousands, will commend;
- And no less warm and zealous 'gainst my foes,
- Spite of commending thousands will oppose;
- I dare thy worst, with scorn behold thy rage,
- But with an eye of pity view thy age;
- Thy feeble age, in which as in a glass
- We see how men to dissolution pass.
- Thou wretched being, whom on reason's plan,
- So chang'd, so lost, I cannot call a man,
- What could persuade thee at this time of life
- To launch afresh into this sea of strife?
- Better for thee, scarce crawling on the earth,
- Almost as much a child as at thy birth,
- To have resign'd in peace thy parting breath,
- And sunk unnotic'd in the arms of death.
- Why would thy gray, gray hairs resentment brave,
- Thus to go down with sorrow to the grave?
- Now by my soul it makes me blush to know
- My spirits could descend to such a foe.
- Whatever cause thy vengeance might provoke,
- It seems rank cowardice to give the stroke."
-
-Seems, Churchill!--nay, it is!
-
-The following address to the artist may, with infinitely more
-propriety, be applied to the bard; whose name I have therefore
-ventured to insert in the place where he has left the name of Hogarth:
-
- "With so much merit, and so much success,
- With so much power to curse, so much to bless,
- Would he have been man's friend instead of foe,
- Churchill had been a little god below.
- Why, then, like savage giants fam'd of old,
- Of whom in Scripture story we are told,
- Dost thou in cruelty that strength employ,
- Which Nature meant to save, not to destroy?
- Why dost thou, all in horrid pomp array'd,
- Sit grinning o'er the ruins thou hast made?
- Most rank ill-nature must applaud thy art,
- But even Candour must condemn thy heart."
-
- --_Epistle to Hogarth._
-
-The whole of this unfeeling composition is dictated by the same
-spirit, and written in much the same style, as the lines I have
-quoted; it reflects more dishonour on the satirist than on the
-subject of his abuse.
-
-To enumerate further examples would be painful as well as tedious:
-the _graven image_ must be attended to.
-
-It represents Mr. Churchill in the character of a bear hugging a
-foaming tankard of porter,[163] and like another Hercules, armed with
-a knotted club, to attack hydras, destroy dragons, and discomfit
-giants!
-
-From the two letters "N. B." inscribed on the club, it appears that
-the painter considered Churchill as a writer in the _North Briton_;
-and from the words "infamous fallacy, Lie the 1st, 2d, 3d, 4th,"
-etc., on each of the knots, that he also considered him as a poet who
-did not pay the strictest regard to truth.
-
-To designate more positively the object of his ridicule, and render
-this rude representative still more ludicrous, it is decorated with a
-band and a pair of ruffles; and with these characteristic ornaments,
-though it remains a good bear, it becomes a sort of overcharged
-portrait of the reverend satirist, and I really think resembles him.
-
-Hogarth's favourite dog Trump, who had been his companion in the
-portrait from which this is altered, retains his original situation
-on the outside of the picture frame, but is now contemptuously
-treating and trampling upon the Epistle to his master. Near him lie
-two books, on one of which is written, "_A New Way to Pay Old Debts_,
-a comedy, by Massinger:" on the other, "_A List of Subscribers to the
-North Briton_." To intimate the poverty of those who wrote it, the
-pyramid is crowned by a begging-box; and beneath, as emblems of art,
-lie a pencil and palette.
-
-In this state the print was published; but the gentleman whom it
-offended asserting that it proved the painter in his dotage, he
-refuted their calumny by the following spirited addition:--
-
-In the form of a framed picture on the painter's palette, is placed
-a small drawing, which may serve as a sort of political postscript
-to his first plate of "The Times," or a kind of prelude to the
-second. It represents Mr. Pitt reclining in a similar position to
-that of Sir Isaac Newton in Westminster Abbey, and is probably meant
-as allusive to his having retired from public business, to enjoy
-the _otium cum dignitate_, a short time before. The background is
-composed of a pyramidical piece of marble, from the top of which
-is suspended a millstone, inscribed "£3000," in allusion to his
-saying that "Hanover was a millstone round the neck of England," and
-afterwards increasing the public burdens by accepting a pension of
-£3000 a year. It is suspended by a thread, and must, if it falls,
-dash him to pieces. This was Hogarth's idea of crushing popularity.
-To heighten the ridicule, though recumbent, he is firing a mortar
-at the symbol of peace, "a dove with an olive branch" perched on
-the standard of England; but his artillery is not powerful enough
-to reach the mark; the powder fails in its effect, the ball falls
-short of its object. In most of his measures Mr. Pitt was supported
-by the city of London, and to this our great metropolis Hogarth
-appears to allude, in making the two Guildhall giants, with each of
-them a pipe of tobacco in his mouth, supporters of the Monument. The
-tubes with Indian weed evidently hint at his great Creolian friend,
-Mr. Alderman Beckford. To denote that Mr. Pitt was the sovereign of
-their affections, and kept the master-key of their iron chests, one
-of these representatives of the city is giving him supreme rule,
-by placing upon his head "the likeness of a kingly crown." The
-other holds a shield, on which is emblazoned the arms of Austria,
-which the statesman indignantly spurns. At an opposite corner, the
-painter has exhibited himself, in the humble character of a showman,
-drilling Messrs. Churchill and Wilkes through the varying steps of
-a political minuet. The first he has represented under the type
-of a bear in a laced hat, and the last as a monkey astride upon a
-mop-stick, with the cap of liberty at the top of it. In his left hand
-he holds a check-string, which being fastened to his two pupils,
-answers the purpose of a bridle, and in his right brandishes a
-cat-o'-nine-tails. That the two quadrupeds may dance to some tune,
-a figure without features, intended as a second delineation of Earl
-Temple, is playing on the fiddle.[164]
-
-Such is Hogarth's representation; and in the poem of _Independence_,
-which Churchill published in September 1764, he admirably parries
-the caricature by a most spirited description of himself. In this he
-has evidently taken Hogarth's print for his model. Having described
-a lean, long, lank, and bony figure, designed for a then unpopular
-nobleman, he thus proceeds:
-
- "Such was the first. The second was a man
- Whom Nature built on a quite different plan:
- A bear, whom from the moment he was born,
- His dam despis'd, and left unlick'd in scorn:
- A Babel, which, the power of art outdone,
- She could not finish when she had begun:
- An utter chaos, out of which no might
- But that of God could strike one spark of light.
- Broad were his shoulders, and from blade to blade
- A H---- might at full length have laid.
- Vast were his bones; his muscles twisted strong;
- His face was short, but broader than 'twas long.
- His features, though by nature they were large,
- Contentment had contrived to overcharge,
- And bury meaning; save that we might spy
- Sense low'ring on the pent-house of his eye,[165]
- His arms were two twin oaks; his legs so stout,
- That they might bear a mansion-house about.
- Nor were they,--look but at his body there,
- Design'd by fate a much less weight to bear.
- "O'er a brown cassock, which had once been black,
- Which hung in tatters on his brawny back,
- A sight most strange and awkward to behold,
- He threw a covering of blue and gold.
- "Just at that time of life when man by rule
- The fop laid down, takes up the graver fool,
- He started up a fop, and fond of show,
- Look'd like another Hercules turn'd beau;
- A subject met with only now and then,
- Much fitter for the pencil than the pen.
- Hogarth would draw him, Envy must allow,
- Ev'n to the life,--were Hogarth living now."[166]
-
-In the following letter written to his friend Mr. Wilkes, and dated
-August 3, 1763, Churchill considers Hogarth as already dead:--
-
- "I take it for granted you have seen Hogarth's print against me.
- Was ever anything so contemptible? I think he is fairly _felo
- de se_. I think not to let him off in that manner, although I
- might safely leave him to your notes.[167] He has broken into
- my pale of private life, and set that example of illiberality
- which I wished; of that kind of attack which is ungenerous in the
- first instance, but justice in return.[168] I intend an elegy
- on him, supposing him dead; but *---- *---- tells me, with a
- kiss, he will be really dead before it comes out; that I have
- already killed him, etc. How sweet is flattery from the woman we
- love![169] and how weak is our boasted strength, when opposed to
- beauty and good sense with good-nature."
-
-Mr. Churchill died at Boulogne in his thirty-second year, and was in
-November 1764 buried at Dover: at which place, on a small stone in
-the old churchyard, formerly belonging to the collegiate Church of
-St. Martin, is the following inscription:
-
- "Life to the last enjoy'd, here Churchill lies."
-
-
-
-
-APPENDIX,
-
-CONSISTING OF
-
-ENGRAVED HEADPIECES FOR RECEIPTS, ETC.
-
-
-At the time that Hogarth lived, we were not compelled to have our
-receipts sanctioned with a royal stamp; but upon the receipts given
-by Hogarth, there was "the stamp of genius, the broad seal of
-nature!" Whoever paid a subscription had a written acknowledgment
-beneath a little print. This invariably abounded in wit, but had
-seldom any immediate allusion to the series with which it was
-presented.[170] His great works I consider as giving not only a
-general mirror of the human mind, but a history of the local and
-temporary customs of the day when they were published. I have
-therefore arranged them in the order they were engraved; and thinking
-that the receipts, or less important prints, would break the chain by
-which they are in a degree connected, I have reserved the following
-short memoranda for an appendix:--
-
-
-BOYS PEEPING AT NATURE.[171]
-
- "Thou, Nature, art my goddess."
-
-[Illustration: BOYS PEEPING AT NATURE.]
-
-This plate was engraved in 1733, and intended as the
-subscription-ticket to "The Harlot's Progress;" but in the original
-design Nature was habited in a petticoat, and the boy who now points
-to a three-quarters portrait was placed before her, and represented
-as curiously stooping down to examine the fringe. Some of the
-artist's friends, suggesting that this was too ludicrous an idea for
-the public, the copper was thrown aside.
-
-In the year 1751, Hogarth etched his burlesque "Paul," as a
-receipt-ticket to the large "Paul before Felix." In a printed
-catalogue of his works, dated 1754, I find "Paul before Felix" marked
-£0, 7s. 6d., and "Paul before Felix, in the manner of Rembrandt," £0,
-0s. 0d. Applications for the gratis etching were very frequent; and
-he found, to his great mortification, that the public were more eager
-to possess his little print than either of the large ones. To punish
-their want of taste, he gave away no more, but fixed the price at
-two-thirds of the sum at which he published the large print.
-
-This alteration of his first plan left the great "Paul" without a
-ticket. To have given him the "Peeping Boys" in their original
-state, would have been a species of sacrilege; they were chastened,
-grouped as they now are, and transferred from the "Harlot" to the
-"Apostle."
-
-Though the circumstance from which it received a name was done away,
-and very little either novel or striking remains, he retained the
-original title of "Boys Peeping at Nature."[172]
-
-
-FIVE GROUPS OF HEADS.
-
-THE LAUGHING AUDIENCE.
-
- "Let him laugh now, who never laugh'd before;
- And he who always laugh'd, laugh now the more."
-
-[Illustration: THE LAUGHING AUDIENCE.]
-
-From the first print that Hogarth engraved to the last that he
-published, I do not think there is one in which character is more
-displayed than in this very spirited little etching. It is much
-superior to the more delicate engravings from his designs by other
-artists, and I prefer it to those that were still higher finished by
-his own burin.
-
-The prim coxcomb with an enormous bag, whose favours, like those of
-Hercules between Virtue and Vice, are contended for by two rival
-orange girls, gives an admirable idea of the dress of the day; when,
-if we may judge from this print, our grave forefathers, defying
-nature and despising convenience, had a much higher rank in the
-temple of Folly than was then attained by their ladies. It must be
-acknowledged that since that period the softer sex have asserted
-their natural rights; and, snatching the wreath of fashion from the
-brow of presuming man, have tortured it into such forms--that were it
-possible, which certes it is not, to disguise a beauteous face!--But
-to the high behest of fashion all must bow.
-
-Governed by this idol, our beau has a cuff that for a modern fop
-would furnish fronts for a waistcoat, and a family fire-screen might
-be made of his enormous bag. His bare and shrivelled neck has a close
-resemblance to that of a half-starved greyhound; and his face,
-figure, and air, form a fine contrast to the easy and _degagée_
-assurance of the grisette whom he addresses.
-
-The opposite figure, nearly as grotesque, though not quite so formal
-as _its_ companion, presses _its_ left hand upon _its_ breast,[173]
-in the style of protestation, and eagerly contemplating the
-superabundant charms of a beauty of Rubens' school, presents her with
-a pinch of comfort.[174] Every muscle, every line of his countenance,
-is acted upon by affectation and grimace, and his queue bears some
-resemblance to an ear-trumpet.
-
-The total inattention of these three polite persons to the business
-of the stage, which at this moment almost convulses the children
-of Nature who are seated in the pit, is highly descriptive of that
-refined apathy which characterizes our people of fashion, and raises
-them above those mean passions that agitate the groundlings.
-
-One gentleman, indeed,[175] is as affectedly unaffected as a man
-of the first world. By his saturnine cast of face and contracted
-brow, he is evidently a profound critic, and much too wise to
-laugh. He must indisputably be a very great genius; for, like
-Voltaire's Poccocurante, nothing can please him; and while those
-around open every avenue of their minds to mirth, and are willing
-to be delighted, though they do not well know why, he analyzes
-the drama by the laws of Aristotle, and finding those laws are
-violated, determines that the author ought to be hissed instead of
-being applauded. This it is to be so excellent a judge; this it is
-which gives a critic that exalted gratification which can never
-be attained by the illiterate: the supreme power of pointing out
-faults where others discern nothing but beauties, and preserving a
-rigid inflexibility of muscle while the sides of the vulgar herd are
-shaking with laughter. These merry mortals, thinking with Plato that
-it is no proof of a good stomach to nauseate every aliment presented
-them, do not inquire too nicely into _causes_; but, giving full scope
-to their risibility, display a set of features more highly ludicrous
-than I ever saw in any other print. It is to be regretted that the
-artist has not given us some clue by which we might have known
-what was the play which so much delighted his audience: I should
-conjecture that it was either one of Shakspeare's comedies, or a
-modern tragedy. Sentimental comedy was not the fashion of that day.
-
-The three sedate musicians in the orchestra, totally engrossed by
-minims and crotchets, are an admirable contrast to the company in the
-pit.
-
-
-THE LECTURE.
-
-DATUR VACUUM.
-
- "No wonder that science, and learning profound,
- In Oxford and Cambridge so greatly abound,
- When so many take thither a little each day,
- And we see very few who bring any away."
-
-[Illustration: THE LECTURE.]
-
-I was once told by a fellow of a college that he would never purchase
-Hogarth's works, because Hogarth had in this print ridiculed one of
-the Universities. I endeavoured to defend the artist, by suggesting
-that this was not intended as a picture of what Oxford is now, but
-of what it was in days long past: that it was that kind of general
-satire with which no one should be offended, etc. etc. His reply
-was too memorable to be forgotten: "Sir, the Theatre, the Bench,
-the College of Physicians, and the Foot Guards, are fair objects of
-satire; but those venerable characters who have devoted their whole
-lives to feeding the lamp of learning with hallowed oil, are too
-sacred to be the sport of an uneducated painter. Their unremitting
-industry embraced the whole circle of the sciences, and in their
-logical disputations they displayed an acuteness that their followers
-must contemplate with astonishment. The present state of Oxford it
-is not necessary for me to analyze, as you contend that the satire is
-not directed against that."
-
-In answer to this observation, which was uttered with becoming
-gravity, a gentleman present remarked as follows: "For some of the
-ancient customs of this seminary of learning I have much respect;
-but as to their dry treatises on logic, immaterial dissertations on
-materiality, and abstruse investigations of useless subjects, they
-are mere literary legerdemain. Their disputations being usually
-built on an undefinable chimera, are solved by a paradox. Instead
-of exercising their power of reason, they exert their powers
-of sophistry, and divide and subdivide every subject with such
-casuistical minuteness, that those who are not convinced are almost
-invariably confounded. This custom, it must be granted, is not quite
-so prevalent as it once was: a general spirit of reform is rapidly
-diffusing itself; and though I have heard cold-blooded declaimers
-assert that these shades of science are become the retreats of
-ignorance and the haunts of dissipation, I consider them as the great
-schools of urbanity, and favourite seats of the _belles lettres_. By
-the _belles lettres_ I mean history, biography, and poetry; that all
-these are universally cultivated, I can exemplify by the manner in
-which a highly accomplished young man, who is considered as a model
-by his fellow-collegians, divides his hours.
-
-"At breakfast I found him studying the marvellous and eventful
-history of _Baron Munchausen_; a work whose periods are equally
-free from the long-winded obscurity of Tacitus, and the asthmatic
-terseness of Sallust. While his hair was dressing, he enlarged his
-imagination and improved his morals by studying Doctor what's his
-name's _Abridgment of Chesterfield's Principles of Politeness_.
-To furnish himself with biographical information, and add to his
-stock of useful anecdote, he studied the _Lives of the Highwaymen_;
-in which he found many opportunities of exercising his genius and
-judgment in drawing parallels between the virtues and exploits of
-these modern worthies, and those dignified and almost deified ancient
-heroes whose deeds are recorded in Plutarch and Nepos.
-
-"With poetical studies he is furnished by the English operas, which,
-added to the prologues, epilogues, and odes of the day, afford him
-higher entertainment than he could find in Homer or Virgil: he has
-not stored his memory with many epigrams, but of puns has a plentiful
-stock, and in _conundra_ is a wholesale dealer. At the same college I
-know a most striking contrast, whose reading"---- But as his opponent
-would hear no more, my advocate dropped the subject; and I will
-follow his example.
-
-It seems probable that when the artist engraved this print he had
-only a general reference to an university lecture; the words _datur
-vacuum_ were an after-thought. I have seen prints without the
-inscription, and in some of the early impressions it is written with
-a pen.
-
-The scene is laid at Oxford, and the person reading, universally
-admitted to be a Mr. Fisher of Jesus College, _registrat_ of the
-university, with whose consent this portrait was taken, and who lived
-until the 18th of March 1761. That he should wish to have such a face
-handed down to posterity in such company is rather extraordinary;
-for all the band, except one man, have been steeped in the stream
-of stupidity. This gentleman has the profile of penetration; a
-projecting forehead, a Roman nose, thin lips, and a long pointed
-chin. His eye is bent on vacancy: it is evidently directed to the
-moon-faced idiot that crowns the pyramid, at whose round head,
-contrasted by a cornered cap, he with difficulty supresses a laugh.
-Three fellows on the right hand of this fat, contented "first-born
-transmitter of a foolish face," have most degraded characters, and
-are much fitter for the stable than the college. If they ever read,
-it must be in Bracken's _Farriery_, or _The Country Gentleman's
-Recreation_. Two square-capped students a little beneath the top, one
-of whom is holding converse with an adjoining profile, and the other
-lifting up his eyebrows and staring without sight, have the same
-misfortune that attended our first James--their tongues are rather
-too large. A figure in the left-hand corner has shut his eyes to
-think; and having, in his attempt to separate a syllogism, placed the
-forefinger of his right hand upon his forehead, has fallen asleep.
-The professor, a little above the book, endeavours by a projection of
-his under lip to assume importance; such characters are not uncommon:
-they are more solicitous to look wise than to be so. Of Mr. Fisher it
-is not necessary to say much: he sat for his portrait for the express
-purpose of having it inserted in the "Lecture!"--We want no other
-testimony of his talents. To the whole tribe I bid a long and last
-adieu.
-
- "Ye dull deluders, truth's destructive foes,
- Cold sons of fiction, clad in stupid prose;
- Ye treacherous leaders, who, yourselves in doubt,
- Light up false fires, and send us far about;
- Still may the spider round your pages spin,
- Subtle and slow, her emblematic gin!
- Buried in dust, and lost in silence dwell,
- Most potent, grave, and reverend friends--farewell!"
-
-
-REHEARSAL OF THE ORATORIO OF JUDITH.
-
- "O cara, cara! silence all that train;
- Joy to great chaos! let division reign."
-
-[Illustration: THE ORCHESTRA.]
-
-The oratorio of _Judith_ was written by Esquire William Huggins,[176]
-honoured by the music of William de Fesch, aided by new painted
-scenery and _magnifique_ decoration, and in the year 1733 brought
-upon the stage. As De Fesch[177] was a German and a genius, we may
-fairly presume it was well set; and there was at that time, as at
-this, a sort of musical mania, that paid much greater attention
-to sounds than to sense. Notwithstanding all these points in her
-favour, when the Jewish heroine had made her theatrical _début_,
-and so effectually smote Holofernes,
-
- "As to sever
- His head from his great trunk for ever, and for ever,"
-
-the audience compelled her to make her exit. To set aside this
-partial and unjust decree, Mr. Huggins appealed to the public,
-and printed[178] his oratorio. Though it was adorned with a
-frontispiece designed by Hogarth and engraved by Vandergucht, the
-world could not be compelled to read, and the unhappy writer had
-no other resource than the consolatory reflection, that his work
-was superlatively excellent, but unluckily printed in a tasteless
-age:[179] a comfortable and solacing self-consciousness, which hath,
-I verily believe, prevented many a great genius from becoming his own
-executioner.
-
-To paint a sound is impossible; but as far as art can go towards it,
-Mr. Hogarth has gone in this print. The tenor, treble, and bass of
-these ear-piercing choristers are so decisively discriminated, that
-we all but hear them.
-
-The principal figure, whose head, hands, and feet are in equal
-agitation, has very properly tied on his spectacles; it would have
-been prudent to have tied on his periwig also, for by the energy of
-his action he has shaken it from his head, and, absorbed in an eager
-attention to true time, is totally unconscious of his loss.
-
-A _gentleman_--pardon me, I meant _a singer_--in a bag-wig,
-immediately beneath his uplifted hand, I suspect to be of foreign
-growth. _It_ has the engaging air of _an importation from Italy_.
-
-The little figure in the sinister corner is, it seems, intended for a
-Mr. Tothall, a woollen-draper, who lived in Tavistock Court, and was
-Hogarth's intimate friend.
-
-The name of the performer on his right hand,
-
- "Whose growling bass
- Would drown the clarion of the braying ass,"
-
-I cannot learn; nor do I think that this group were meant for
-particular portraits, but a general representation of the violent
-distortions into which these crotchet-mongers draw their features on
-such solemn occasions.
-
-Even the head of the bass viol has air and character: by the band
-under the chin, it gives some idea of a professor,[180] or what is I
-think called a Mus. D.
-
-The words now singing, "The world shall bow to the Assyrian throne,"
-are extracted from Mr. Huggins' oratorio; the etching is in a most
-masterly style, and was originally given as a subscription-ticket to
-"The Modern Midnight Conversation."
-
-I have seen a small political print on Sir Robert Walpole's
-administration, entitled, _Excise, a new Ballad Opera_, of which this
-was unquestionably the basis. Beneath it is the following learned and
-poetical motto:
-
- "Experto crede Roberto."
-
- "Mind how each hireling songster tunes his throat,
- And the vile knight beats time to every note:
- So Nero sung while Rome was all in flames,
- But time shall brand with infamy their names."
-
-
-ET PLURIMA MORTIS IMAGO.
-
-THE COMPANY OF UNDERTAKERS,
-
-[Illustration: THE COMPANY OF UNDERTAKERS.]
-
-"Beareth sable, an urinal proper, between twelve quack heads of
-the second, and twelve cane heads OR, consultant. On a chief[181]
-nebulæ,[182] ermine, one complete doctor[183] issuant checkie,
-sustaining in his right hand a baton of the second. On his dexter
-and sinister side, two demi-doctors, issuant of the second, and two
-cane heads issuant of the third: the first having one eye couchant,
-towards the dexter side of the escutcheon; the second faced per pale
-proper, and gules guardant, with this motto, 'Et plurima mortis
-imago.'"
-
-It has been said of the ancients, that they began by attempting to
-make physic a science, and failed; of the moderns, that they began
-by attempting to make it a trade, and succeeded. This company are
-moderns to a man; and if we may judge of their capacities by their
-countenances, are indeed a most sapient society. Their practice is
-very extensive, and they go about taking guineas,
-
- "Far as the weekly bills can reach around,
- From Kent Street end, to fam'd St. Giles's pound."
-
-Many of them are unquestionably portraits;[184] but as these grave
-and sage descendants of Galen are long since gone to that place where
-they before sent their patients, I am unable to ascertain any of
-them, except the three who are for distinction placed in the chief
-or most honourable part of the escutcheon. Those whom, from their
-exalted situation, we may naturally conclude the most distinguished
-and sagacious leeches of their day, have marks too obtrusive to be
-mistaken. He towards the dexter side of the escutcheon is determined
-by an eye in the head of his cane to be the all-accomplished
-Chevalier Taylor,[185] in whose marvellous and surprising history,
-written by his own hand, and published in 1761, is recorded such
-events relative to himself and others[186] as have excited more
-astonishment than that incomparable romance, _Don Belianis of
-Greece_, _the Arabian Nights_, or _Sir John Mandeville his Travels_.
-
-The centre figure, arrayed in a harlequin jacket, with a bone, or
-what the painter denominates a baton, in the right hand, is generally
-considered designed for Mrs. Mapp, a masculine woman, daughter to
-one Wallin, a bone-setter at Hindon, in Wiltshire. This female
-Thalestris, incompatible as it may seem with her sex, adopted her
-father's profession, travelled about the country, calling herself
-_crazy Sally_; and like another Hercules, did wonders by strength
-of arm! An old gentleman, who knew this lady, assures me, that
-notwithstanding all the unkind things which her medical brethren
-said of her ignorance, etc., she was entitled to an equal portion of
-professional praise with many of those who decried her; for not more
-than nineteen out of twenty of her patients died under her hands.
-
-The _Grub Street Journal_, and some other papers of that day,
-are crowded with paragraphs[189] relative to her cures and her
-consequence.
-
-On the sinister side is Doctor Ward, generally called Spot Ward,
-from his left cheek being marked with a claret colour. This gentleman
-was of a respectable family,[191] and though not highly educated, had
-talents very superior to either of his coadjutors.
-
-For the chief, this must suffice; as for the twelve quack heads and
-twelve cane heads OR, consultant, united with the cross-bones at the
-corners, they have a most mortuary appearance, and do indeed convey a
-general image of death.
-
-In the time of Lucian, a philosopher was distinguished by three
-things: his avarice, his impudence, and his beard. In the time of
-Hogarth, medicine was a mystery,[192] and there were three things
-which distinguished the physician: his gravity, his cane head, and
-his periwig. With these leading requisites, this venerable party
-are most amply gifted. To specify every character is not necessary;
-but the upper figure on the dexter side, with a wig like a weeping
-willow, should not be overlooked. His lemon-like aspect must curdle
-the blood of all his patients. In the countenances of his brethren
-there is no want of acids; but however sour each individual was in
-his day--
-
- "A doctor of renown,
- To none but such as rust in health unknown,
- And save or slay, this privilege they claim,
- Or death, or life, the bright reward's the same."[193]
-
-Ward, Taylor, and Mapp were considered as a proper trio by other
-persons besides Hogarth: some lines beginning as follows, were
-written about the latter end of 1736:--
-
- "In this bright age three wonder-workers rise,
- Whose operations puzzle all the wise;
- To lame and blind, by dint of manual slight,
- Mapp gives the use of limbs, and Taylor sight.
- But greater Ward," etc.
-
-
-GROUP OF HEADS
-
-INTENDED TO DISPLAY THE DIFFERENCE BETWIXT CHARACTER AND CARICATURE.
-
- For a further explanation of this difference, see the Preface to
- _Joseph Andrews_.[194]
-
-[Illustration: CHARACTERS CARICATVRAS]
-
-"In Lairesse; still more in Poussin; and most of all in Raphael;
-simplicity, greatness of conception, tranquillity, superiority,
-sublimity the most exalted! Raphael can never be enough studied,
-although he only exercised his mind on the rarest forms, the grandest
-traits of countenance.
-
-"In Hogarth, alas, how little of the noble, how little of beauteous
-expression, is to be found in this, I had almost said, false prophet
-of beauty! But what an immense treasure of features, of meanness in
-excess, vulgarity the most disgusting, humour the most irresistible,
-and vice the most unmanly!"--Lavater's _Essays on Physiognomy_.
-
-In this rhapsody there is some truth; but the philosopher of Zurich
-should have recollected that Hogarth could not be expected to attain
-what he never attempted. Sublimity exalted, simplicity angelic,
-and the ideal grandeur of superior beings, he left to those who
-delineated subjects which demanded such characters; and contented
-himself with representing Nature, not as it ought to be, but as he
-found it. That he had little reverence for the dreams of those who
-portrayed imaginary beings, I have had occasion to remark; but that
-he respected their waking thoughts is evinced in this print, where
-the heads of three figures from Raphael's Cartoons are introduced
-under the article character, in opposition to the fantastic
-caricatures of Cavalier Chezze, Annibal Characi,[195] and Leonard
-da Vinci: the last of whom, I am very sorry to see so classed; for
-to his anatomical knowledge the late Dr. Hunter gave the strongest
-testimony, by declaring his intention to publish a volume illustrated
-by the designs of this artist, as anatomical studies.
-
-I have often seen three engravings from the same picture, by an
-Italian, an English, and a French artist, which, with a tolerable
-correctness of outline, have in their general characters a
-dissimilarity that is astonishing. Each engraver gives his national
-air. The three heads from Raphael, at the bottom of this print, are
-etched by Hogarth, and sufficiently marked to determine the master
-from whence they are copied; but their grandeur, elevation, and
-simplicity is totally evaporated.
-
-With angels, apostles, and saints, he was not happy. In the group
-placed above them he has been more successful. Hogarth was less of a
-mannerist than almost any other artist; for though there are above
-a hundred profiles, I discover no copy from another painter; no
-repetition of his own works: they are all delineated from nature, and
-the most careless observer must discover many resemblances: to the
-physiognomist, they are an inexhaustible study.
-
-This print was given as a subscription-ticket to the six plates of
-"Marriage à la Mode."
-
-
-SARAH MALCOLM.
-
- _Executed opposite Mitre Court, Fleet Street, on the 7th of March
- 1733, for the murder of Mrs. Lydia Duncombe, Elizabeth Harrison,
- and Anne Price._
-
- "How shalt thou hope for mercy, rendering none?"
-
-[Illustration: SARAH MALCOLM.]
-
-The portrait of this sanguinary wretch Mr. Hogarth painted in
-Newgate; and to Sir James Thornhill, who accompanied him, he made the
-following observation: "I see by this woman's features that she is
-capable of any wickedness."
-
-Of his skill in physiognomy I entertain a very high opinion; but
-as Sarah sat for her picture after condemnation, I suspect his
-observation to resemble those prophecies which were made after the
-completion of events they professed to foretell. She has a locked-up
-mouth, wide nostrils, and a penetrating eye, with a general air that
-indicates close observation and masculine courage; but I do not
-discover either depravity or cruelty; though her conduct in this, as
-well as some other horrible transactions,[196] evinced an uncommon
-portion of both, and proved her a Lady Macbeth in low life.
-
-Her infatuation in lurking about the Temple after perpetration of the
-crime for which she suffered, it is difficult to account for upon any
-other principle than that general remorse and horror which tortures
-the minds of those who shed a brother's blood; and that overruling
-Providence, which by means most strange brings their guilt to light
-and their crimes to punishment;
-
- "For murder, though it have no tongue, will speak
- With most miraculous organ."
-
-The circumstances which attended her commitment and execution were
-briefly as follows:--
-
-At noon, on Sunday the fourth of February 1733, Mrs. Duncombe, a
-widow lady, upwards of eighty years old (who lived up four pair
-of stairs, next staircase to the Inner Temple library); Elizabeth
-Harrison, another elderly person who was her companion; and Anne
-Price, her servant, about seventeen years of age, were found murdered
-in their beds. The maid-servant, who was supposed to be murdered
-first, had her throat cut from ear to ear; but by her cap being off,
-and her hair much entangled, it was thought she had struggled. The
-companion, it was supposed, was strangled; though there were two or
-three wounds in her throat that appeared as if they had been given by
-a nail. Mrs. Duncombe was probably smothered, and killed last, as she
-was found lying across the bed with a gown on; though the others were
-in bed. A trunk in the room was broke open and rifled.
-
-About one o'clock at night, a Mr. Kerrell, who had chambers on the
-same staircase, came home, and to his great surprise found Sarah
-Malcolm, who was his laundress, in his room: he asked her how she
-came to be there at so unseasonable an hour, and if she had heard of
-any one being taken up for the murder? She replied, "that no person
-had yet been taken up; but a gentleman who had chambers beneath, and
-had been absent two or three days, was violently suspected." "Be that
-as it may," said Mr. Kerrell, "you were Mrs. Duncombe's laundress,
-and no one who knew her shall ever come into these chambers until her
-murderer is discovered: pack up your things and go away." While she
-was thus employed, Kerrell observing a bundle upon the floor, and
-thinking her behaviour suspicious, called a watchman to whom he gave
-her in charge. When she was taken away, and he searched his rooms
-with more care, he found several bundles of linen, and a silver pint
-tankard, with the handle bloodied. This confirmed his suspicions,
-and, accompanied by a friend, he went down stairs, and asked the
-watchman where he had taken Malcolm? This faithful guardian of the
-night very coolly replied, "that she had promised to come again
-next day, and he had let her go." Mr. Kerrell declaring that if she
-was not immediately produced he would commit him to Newgate in her
-stead, the fellow went in search of her; and though her lodging
-was in Shoreditch, he found this infatuated woman sitting between
-two other watchman at the Temple gate. She was then committed to
-Newgate; and there was found concealed in her hair, eighteen guineas,
-twenty moidores, five broad pieces, five crown pieces, and a few
-shillings.[197]
-
-On her examination before Sir Richard Brocas, she confessed to
-sharing in the produce of the robbery, but declared herself innocent
-of the murders; asserting upon oath, that Thomas and James Alexander,
-and Mary Tracy, were principal parties in the whole transaction.
-Notwithstanding this, the coroner's jury brought in their verdict of
-wilful murder against Sarah Malcolm only, it not then appearing that
-any other person was concerned. Her confession they considered as a
-mere subterfuge, none knowing such people as she pretended were her
-accomplices.
-
-A few days after, a boy about seventeen years of age was hired as
-a servant by a person who kept the Red Lion alehouse at Bridewell
-Bridge; and hearing it said in his master's house that Sarah Malcolm
-had given in an information against one Thomas and James Alexander,
-and Mary Tracy, said to his master, "My name is James Alexander, and
-I have a brother named Thomas, and my mother nursed a woman where
-Sarah Malcolm lived." Upon this acknowledgment, the master sent
-to Alstone, turnkey of Newgate; and the boy being confronted with
-Malcolm, she immediately charged him with being concealed under Mrs.
-Duncombe's bed, previous to letting in Tracy and his brother, by
-whom and himself the murders were committed. On this evidence he was
-detained; and frankly telling where his brother and Tracy were to
-be found, they also were taken into custody, and brought before Sir
-Richard Brocas. Here Malcolm persisted in her former asseverations;
-but the magistrate thought her unworthy of credit, and would have
-discharged them; but being advised by some persons present to act
-with more caution, committed them all to Newgate. Their distress was
-somewhat alleviated by the gentlemen of the Temple Society, who,
-fully convinced of their innocence, allowed each of them one shilling
-per diem during the time of their confinement. This ought to be
-recorded to the honour of the _law_, as it has not often been the
-_practice_ of the profession.
-
-Though Malcolm's presence of mind seems to have forsaken her at the
-time when she lurked about the Temple, without making any attempt
-to escape, and left the produce of her theft in situations that
-rendered discovery inevitable, she by the time of trial recovered
-her recollection, made a most acute and ingenious defence,[198] and
-cross-examined the witnesses with all the black-robed artifice of a
-gentleman bred up to the bar. The circumstances were, however, so
-clear as to leave no doubt in the minds of the court, and the jury
-brought in their verdict--guilty.
-
-On Wednesday the 7th of March, about ten in the morning, she was
-taken in a cart from Newgate to the place of execution, facing Mitre
-Court, Fleet Street,[199] and there suffered death on a gibbet
-erected for the occasion. She was neatly dressed in a crape mourning
-gown, white apron, sarcenet hood, and black gloves: carried her
-head aside with an air of affectation, and was said to be painted.
-She was attended by Doctor Middleton of St. Bride's, her friend
-Mr. Peddington, and Guthrie, the ordinary of Newgate. She appeared
-devout and penitent, and earnestly requested Peddington would print
-a paper she had given him[200] the night before, which contained,
-not a confession of the murder, but protestations of her innocence;
-and a recapitulation of what she had before said relative to the
-Alexanders, etc. This wretched woman, though only twenty-five years
-of age, was so lost to all sense of her situation, as to rush into
-eternity with a lie upon her lips. She much wished to see Mr.
-Kerrell, and acquitted him of every imputation thrown out at her
-trial.
-
-After she had conversed some time with the ministers, and the
-executioner began to do his duty, she fainted away; but recovering,
-was in a short space afterwards executed. Her corpse was carried to
-an undertaker's on Snow Hill, where multitudes of people resorted,
-and gave money to see it: among the rest, a gentleman in deep
-mourning kissed her, and gave the attendants half-a-crown.
-
-Professor Martin dissected this notorious murderess, and afterwards
-presented her skeleton, in a glass case, to the Botanic Gardens at
-Cambridge, where it still remains.
-
-The portrait from which this print was engraved is remarkably well
-painted, and now in the possession of Mr. Josiah Boydell, at West
-End. It was probably copied from that which was painted in Newgate,
-which was in the collection of Mr. Horace Walpole, at Strawberry
-Hill. It will not appear extraordinary that Hogarth should have
-delineated her twice, when we consider, that from the print he
-published there were four copies, besides one in wood, which was
-engraved for the _Gentleman's Magazine_.
-
-Thus eager were the public to possess the portrait of this most
-atrocious woman. All these delineations were what the painters call
-half-lengths; her whole figure was never engraved, except for this
-work.
-
-
-COLUMBUS BREAKING THE EGG.
-
- "Why on these shores are we with pride survey'd,
- Admir'd as heroes, and as gods obey'd!
- Unless great acts superior merit prove,
- And vindicate the bounteous powers above;
- That when, with wond'ring eyes, our martial bands
- Behold our deeds transcending our commands,
- Such, they may cry, deserve the sov'reign state,
- Whom those that envy dare not imitate?"
-
-[Illustration: COLUMBUS AND THE EGG.]
-
-Such is the animated apostrophe of Sarpedon in the energetic numbers
-of Alexander Pope, and it is not more appropriate to Glaucus than to
-the illustrious character who gives the subject of this print. Had
-a Greek discovered America, Sculpture would have erected statues and
-raised altars to his honour; Architecture built temples to perpetuate
-his fame; and by Poetry he must have been deified.
-
-The new creation of Columbus--for a new creation it may be
-denominated--absorbed every former discovery, and sunk to
-insignificance the boasted conquests of Alexander. Previous to this
-voyage a world of water formed what was deemed an insurmountable
-barrier between the inhabitants of one planet;--"He spread his canvas
-wings, and pass'd the mound."
-
-As our own Newton unveiled the celestial globe,[201] and removed that
-cloud which had before shadowed the face of heaven, Columbus, from
-the bare inspection of a map of one world, concluded that there must
-be another. He sailed west, brought together continents that nature
-had severed, and was the first adventurer in a voyage which, from its
-consequent enterprises, has added more square miles to the dominions
-of European powers than the sovereigns by whom he was employed
-possessed acres.[202] His perseverance must have been equal to
-his genius; for he had to struggle with the rooted prejudices of his
-contemporaries,[203] as well as the freezing indifference of those
-monarchs to whom he tendered his service.
-
-Genoa, which was his native country, treated his scheme as visionary.
-Our seventh Henry, mean, cold-blooded, and avaricious, would not
-hazard the loss of that treasure which he adored; and the Emperor had
-neither gold to fit out a fleet nor harbours to receive shipping.
-The attention of John the Second of Portugal was engrossed by
-the coast of Africa, and Charles the Eighth of France was in his
-minority. The Venetians had maritime power, and maritime spirit;
-but Columbus was a Genoese, and had too much of the _amor patriæ_
-to throw such advantages as he foresaw would accrue to those who
-prosecuted his plan into the hands of the rivals and enemies of his
-country. He fixed his hopes on the court of Spain, and his hopes
-were not disappointed. Ferdinand of Aragon and Isabella of Castile
-had by their marriage united all Spain under one dominion: to them
-he applied; and, with a perseverance that could only be supported
-by a conscious certainty that his project, if undertaken, must be
-successful, attended their court eight tedious years! At the end of
-this time, two merchants, trusting to royal security, and advancing
-seventeen thousand ducats towards fitting out the vessels, Columbus
-received his patent; and on the 23d of August 1492 set sail, with
-three ships only, from the port of Palos in Andalusia.[204]
-
-In less than a month after his departure from the Canaries, he
-discovered the first island in America;[205] and like our immortal
-Admiral Drake, found the fair harvest he had hoped to reap in great
-danger of being blighted by the murmuring and discontent of his
-crew. To check this mutinous spirit required both resolution and
-address, and in Columbus they were united. He quieted his companions,
-and, with true catholic formality, baptized his new discovery St.
-Salvadore. He soon after made the Lucayan Islands, together with
-those of Cuba and Hispaniola, now called St. Domingo; and, at the
-end of nine months, returned with some of the natives, a quantity
-of gold, and sundry curious productions of the places he had
-visited,--all of which he laid at the feet of Isabella and Ferdinand.
-
-Their Majesties were neither insensible of his merit nor ungrateful
-for his services: they suffered him to be seated, and added a
-privilege heretofore confined to grandees--the honour of being
-covered in their presence; and crowned their favours by creating him
-admiral and viceroy of whatever he should add to their dominions.
-
-Columbus having found a new empire, and explored a new world, was
-now considered as more than mortal. Those who had loudly decried
-his plan as the chimerical project of a madman, were most eager to
-patronize the heaven-born navigator, and embark under his command. He
-a second time set sail, not with three small vessels, but an armament
-of seventeen ships, manned by a crew who almost adored him, and
-discovered Jamaica, the Caribbees, and several other islands.
-
-His elevation had been too sudden to be permanent; his talents
-were too transcendent to be seen without envy. Notwithstanding the
-services which he had rendered to Spain, the dignities with which he
-was invested, and the flattering prospects with which he set sail, he
-was brought home prisoner, by judges who had been sent on board the
-same vessel as spies upon his conduct; and arrived at the court where
-he had a short time before been covered with laurels--loaded with
-chains.
-
-For this mortifying degradation he was indebted to Fonseca, Bishop of
-Burgos, the intendant of the expedition. Isabella, ashamed of seeing
-a man to whom she was indebted for the brightest jewel in her crown
-thus dishonoured, ordered him to be immediately set at liberty; but
-it does not appear that either queen or king punished the person by
-whose machinations he had been so ignominiously treated. Whether
-his royal protectors feared that he would retain whatever he might
-acquire, wished personally to scrutinize his actions, or had any
-other inducement, he was not suffered to leave Spain for upwards of
-four years. At the expiration of that time he was sent upon another
-voyage, discovered the continent at six degrees distant from the
-equator; and saw that part of the coast on which Carthagena has been
-since built.
-
-After several years' absence he returned to Spain, and in the year
-1506 died at Valladolid. By the king's command, he was honoured with
-a magnificent funeral; and on the marble which covered his remains
-was the following concise and characteristic epitaph: COLUMBUS GAVE
-CASTILE AND LEON A NEW WORLD.
-
-By the success of his first voyage, doubt had been changed into
-admiration; from the honours with which he was rewarded, admiration
-degenerated into envy. To deny that his discovery carried in its
-train consequences infinitely more important than had resulted from
-any made since the creation, was impossible. His enemies had recourse
-to another expedient, and boldly asserted that there was neither
-wisdom in the plan nor hazard in the enterprise.
-
-When he was once at a Spanish supper, the company took this ground;
-and being by his narrative furnished with the reflections which
-had induced him to undertake his voyage, and the course that he
-had pursued in its completion, sagaciously observed, that "it was
-impossible for any man a degree above an idiot to have failed of
-success. The whole process was so obvious, it must have been seen by
-a man who was half blind! Nothing could be so easy!"
-
-"It is not difficult, now I have pointed out the way," was the answer
-of Columbus; "but easy as it will appear, when you are possessed
-of my method, I do not believe that, without such instruction, any
-person present could place one of these eggs upright on the table."
-The cloth, knives, and forks were thrown aside, and two of the party,
-placing their eggs as required, kept them steady with their fingers.
-One of them swore there could be no other way. "We will try," said
-the navigator; and giving an egg, which he held in his hand, a smart
-stroke upon the table, it remained upright.[206] The emotions which
-this excited in the company are expressed in their countenances. In
-the be-ruffed booby at his left hand, it raises astonishment; he is
-a DEAR ME! man, of the same family with Sterne's Simple Traveller,
-and came from _Amiens only yesterday_. The fellow behind him, beating
-his head, curses his own stupidity; and the whiskered ruffian, with
-his forefinger on the egg, is in his heart cursing Columbus. As to
-the two veterans on the other side, they have lived too long to be
-agitated with trifles: he who wears a cap exclaims, "Is this all!"
-and the other, with a bald head, "By St. Jago, I did not think
-of that!" In the face of Columbus there is not that violent and
-excessive triumph which is exhibited by little characters on little
-occasions: he is too elevated to be overbearing; and, pointing to
-the conical solution of his problematical conundrum, displays a calm
-superiority, and silent internal contempt.
-
-Two eels, twisted round the eggs upon the dish, are introduced
-as specimens of the line of beauty; which is again displayed on
-the table-cloth, and hinted at on the knife blade. In all these
-curves there is peculiar propriety; for the etching was given as a
-receipt-ticket to the _Analysis_, where this favourite undulating
-line forms the basis of his system.[207]
-
-In the print of Columbus there is evident reference to the
-criticisms[208] on what Hogarth called his own discovery; and in
-truth the connoisseurs' remarks on the painter were dictated by a
-similar spirit to those of the critics on the navigator: they first
-asserted there was no such line, and when he had proved that there
-was, gave the honour of discovery to Lomazzo, Michael Angelo, etc.
-etc.
-
-
-THE FIVE ORDERS OF PERIWIGS.
-
-AS THEY WERE WORN AT THE LATE CORONATION, MEASURED ARCHITECTONICALLY.
-
-[Illustration: (the five orders of periwigs)]
-
- _Advertisement (inserted under the Print)._
-
- "In about seventeen years[210] will be completed, in six volumes
- folio, price fifteen guineas, _The Exact Measurements of the
- Periwigs of the Ancients_; taken from the Statues, Bustos, and
- Basso Relievos of Athens, Palmyra, Balbec, and Rome; by Modesto,
- Periwig-meter, from Lagado. _N.B._--None will be sold but to
- Subscribers.--Published as the Act directs, Oct. 15, 1761, by W.
- Hogarth."
-
-Previous to this print being published, Mr. Stuart, generally
-denominated Athenian Stuart, advertised that he intended to publish
-by subscription a book, entitled _The Antiquities of Athens_,
-measured and delineated by himself and Nicholas Revitt, painters
-and architects.[211] The first volume of this excellent work
-was published in 1762; it received, and we may add it deserved,
-approbation from every man who had taste enough to relish those
-stupendous monuments of ancient art, which the barbarians who now
-possess the country either destroy or suffer to moulder into dust.
-"To leave a trace behind" was the object of Stuart's book; but
-Hogarth had so long accustomed himself to laugh at the grand gusto of
-the Grecian school, that I can readily suppose he at length thought
-any plan which might damp the public ardour for antiquity would be a
-correction of national taste.[212] With this view he published the
-print now under consideration; and if ridicule were a test of truth,
-it must have effected his purpose. Minute accuracy is the leading
-feature of Stuart's book; minute accuracy is the leading point in
-Hogarth's satire.
-
-Under the shadowy umbrage of his remarkable wigs he has introduced
-several remarkable characters.
-
-Two profiles in the upper row, under the title "Episcopal," or
-"Parsonic," are said to be intended for Doctor Warburton, late Bishop
-of Gloucester, and Doctor Samuel Squire, then Bishop of St. David's.
-
-The next row is inscribed "Old Peerian," or "Aldermanic;" the first
-face, in every sense _full_, is said to be meant for Lord Melcombe;
-but considering the class he is placed in, may as well represent some
-sagacious alderman of the day. At the opposite end of the same line
-is that remarkable winged periwig, worn by Sir Samuel Fludyer, Lord
-Mayor of London, at the coronation.
-
-A row beneath is made up of the "Lexonic," and under it is the
-"Composite," or half-natural, and the "Queerinthian," or Queue de
-Renard. Even with them is a barber's block, crowned with a pair
-of compasses, and marked "Athenian measure." This I believe was
-intended as a caricature of Mr. Stuart, and considered as such is an
-overcharged resemblance. Above the block is a table of references,
-and facing it a scale, divided into nodules, or noddles; nasos,
-or noses; and minutes. To enter fully into the spirit of this
-whimsical print, the spectator must be acquainted with the terms of
-architecture.
-
-At the bottom is a portrait of her Majesty, distinguished by the
-simplicity of her head-dress, and five right honourable ladies,
-whose different ranks are pointed out by their coronets, and who
-all wear the _tryglyph membretta_ drop, or neck-lock. Those who
-knew their persons will find no difficulty in ascertaining their
-respective titles. The bed-chamber ladies in 1761 were--Duchess of
-Ancaster, Duchess of Hamilton, Countess of Effingham, Countess of
-Northumberland, Viscountess Weymouth, Viscountess Bolingbroke.[213]
-About the centre of the print is the following inscription:--
-
-"Lest the beauty of these capitals should chiefly depend as usual on
-the delicacy of the engraving, the author hath etched them with his
-own hand."
-
-They are etched with spirit, and in spelling--incorrect as can be
-desired by Mr. Hogarth's greatest enemy. The word Advertisement is,
-in latter impressions, corrected by an _e_ being inserted on the
-Countess of Northumberland's left shoulder.
-
-
-THE BENCH.
-
- "CHARACTER, CARICATURE, AND OUTRE."
-
-[Illustration: THE BENCH.]
-
-"There are hardly any two things more essentially different than
-character and caricature; nevertheless they are usually confounded
-and mistaken for each other, on which account this explanation is
-attempted.
-
-"It has ever been allowed, that when a character is strongly marked
-in the living face, it may be considered as an index of the mind, to
-express which with any degree of justness in painting, requires the
-utmost efforts of a great master. Now, that which has of late years
-got the name of caricature, is, or ought to be, totally divested of
-every stroke that hath a tendency to good drawing; it may be said
-to be a species of lines that are produced rather by the hand of
-chance than of skill: for the early scrawlings of a child, which do
-but barely hint an idea of a human face, will always be found to
-be like some person or other, and will often form such a comical
-resemblance, as in all probability the most eminent caricatures of
-these times will not be able to equal with design; because their
-ideas of objects are so much the more perfect than children's, that
-they will unavoidably introduce some kind of drawing: for all the
-humorous effects of the fashionable manner of caricaturing chiefly
-depend on the surprise we are under at finding ourselves caught with
-any sort of similitude in objects absolutely remote in their kind.
-Let it be observed, the more remote in their nature, the greater is
-the excellence of these pieces. As a proof of this, I remember a
-famous caricature of a certain Italian singer, that struck at first
-sight, which consisted only of a straight perpendicular line, with a
-dot over it. As to the French word _outré_, it is different from the
-foregoing, and signifies nothing more than the exaggerated outline of
-a figure, all the parts of which may be in other respects a perfect
-and true picture of human nature. A giant or a dwarf may be called a
-common man _outré_; so any part, as a nose, or leg, made bigger or
-less than it ought to be, is that part _outré_, which is all that is
-to be understood by this word, injudiciously used to the prejudice
-of character."--_See_ Excess, _Analysis of Beauty_, chap. 6.
-
-The unfinished group of heads in the upper part of this print was
-added by the author in October 1764, and was intended as a further
-illustration of what is here said concerning character, caricature,
-and _outré_. He worked upon it the day before his death, which
-happened the 26th of that month.
-
-The system which Mr. Hogarth has laboured to establish in the above
-inscription, and which I think the genuine system, he has not
-illustrated with his usual felicity in the print to which it is
-annexed.
-
-It was published in 1758, and in its first state exhibited a view of
-the Court of Common Pleas, and portraits of the four sages who then
-sat on that Bench.[214] Lord Chief-Justice Sir John Willes is the
-principal figure; on his right hand is Sir Edward Clive, and on his
-left Mr. Justice Bathurst, and the Honourable William Noel.
-
-In this state the print gave character only; for though the robes of
-my Lord Chief-Justice may have a shade of the _outré_, they in no
-degree approach to that caricature which the unfinished group added
-to the plate in 1764 was intended to display. Had the artist lived to
-finish them, they might have given weight to his assertions, but in
-their present state do not much illuminate his doctrine.
-
-The picture, from which each of the prints considerably vary,
-was originally the property of Sir George Hay, and is now in the
-possession of Mr. Edwards.
-
-
-THE BEGGARS' OPERA.
-
- "The charge is prepar'd; the lawyers are met;
- The judges all rang'd (a terrible show!)
- I go undismayed,--for death is a debt,
- A debt on demand,--so take what I owe.
- Then farewell, my love,--dear charmers, adieu;
- Contented I die,--'tis the better for you.
- Here ends all dispute the rest of our lives,
- For this way at once I please all my wives."
-
-[Illustration: BEGGARS' OPERA ACT III.]
-
-From the third act of this very instructive and popular opera, Mr.
-Hogarth has selected the subject of this print. The scene is laid in
-Newgate, and the point of time seems to be about the fifty-third air,
-which is sung by the elegant and accomplished
-
-
-CAPTAIN MACHEATH.
-
- "Which way shall I turn me? how shall I decide?
- Wives, the day of our death, are as fond as a bride.
- One wife is too much for most husbands to hear;
- But two at a time, there's no mortal can bear.
- This way, and that way, and which way I will,
- What would comfort the one, t'other wife would take ill.
-
-POLLY.
-
- "But if his own misfortunes have made him insensible to mine,--a
- father, sure, will be more compassionate. Dear, dear sir, sink
- the material evidence, and bring him off at his trial,--Polly
- upon her knees begs it of you.
-
- "When my hero in court appears,
- And stands arraign'd for his life,
- Then think of poor Polly's tears,
- For ah! poor Polly's his wife.
- Like the sailor he holds up his hand,
- Distress'd on the dashing wave;
- To die a dry death at land
- Is as bad as a wat'ry grave.
- And alas, poor Polly!
- Alack, and well-a-day!
- Before I was in love,
- Oh! every month was May.
-
-LUCY.
-
- "If Peachum's heart is hardened, sure you, sir, will have more
- compassion on a daughter: I know the evidence is in your power.
- How then can you be a tyrant to me?
-
- "When he holds up his hand, arraign'd for his life,
- O think of your daughter, and think I'm his wife!
- What are cannons, or bombs, or clashing of swords?
- For death is more certain by witnesses' words.
- Then nail up their lips: that dread thunder allay;
- And each month of my life will hereafter be May."
-
-For more of Mr. Gay's moral dialogue I have not room.
-
-In the year 1727, it was performed sixty-three nights successively,
-and in the year 1791 retains its primitive attractions, and is become
-what the Drury Lane diary styles a stock play.
-
-That it is countenanced by the public is an apology for the managers:
-
- "For they who live to please, must please to live;"
-
-but that it should have the sanction of the Chamberlain is
-astonishing.[215]
-
-We are told in Mr. Boswell's _Johnson_, that when Gay showed this
-opera to his patron, the late worthy Duke of Queensberry, his Grace's
-observation was, "This is a very odd thing, Gay; it is either a very
-good thing, or a very bad thing." It proved the former, beyond the
-warmest expectations of the author or his friends; though Quin, whose
-knowledge of the public taste cannot be questioned, was so doubtful
-of its success, that he refused to play the part of Macheath, which
-was therefore given to Walker. In the same volumes I learn that Dr.
-Johnson did not apprehend that the performance of this opera had the
-pernicious influence which is ascribed to it.[216] For the Doctor's
-talents and virtues I have a reverence bordering upon idolatry: in
-questions of morality he can seldom be contradicted, and without
-the strongest conviction that in this point he is wrong, I should
-tremble to dissent from his opinion; but my deductions are drawn
-from examples that to me are conclusive. With three instances that
-I had an accidental opportunity of seeing, I was very forcibly
-impressed. Two boys, under nineteen years of age, children of worthy
-and respectable parents, fled from their friends, and pursued courses
-that threatened an ignominious termination to their lives. After much
-search they were found engaged in midnight depredations, and in each
-of their pockets was the _Beggars' Opera_.
-
-A boy of seventeen, some years since tried at the Old Bailey for
-what there was every reason to think his first offence, acknowledged
-himself so delighted with the spirited and heroic character of
-Macheath, that on quitting the theatre he laid out his last guinea
-in the purchase of a pair of pistols, and stopped a gentleman on the
-highway.[217]
-
-The accumulation of similiar facts is not necessary. Those who think
-that lively dialogue, and natural though vulgar repartee, can atone
-for what gives new attractions to vice, will, I suppose, continue
-to sanction this performance by attending the representation. If
-anything could balance the baneful influence it is calculated to
-disseminate, Gay must be allowed the praise of having attempted to
-stem Italia's liquid stream, which at that time meandered through
-every alley, street, and square in the metropolis; the honour of
-having almost silenced the effeminate song of that absurd exotic,
-Italian opera, which a little previous to this time was the grand
-pursuit of the fashionable world. For to the dishonour of true
-taste, to the disgrace of common sense, the discords and jarrings of
-Cuzzoni, Faustina, and Senesino, excited as much attention, and were
-entered into with as much party zeal, as were the political contests
-between Lord Chatham and Sir Robert Walpole, or those still more
-recent, between Mr. Charles Fox and Mr. William Pitt.[218]
-
-The method Gay took to rout this army of unnatural auxiliaries
-does great honour to his generalship. A new disorder had been
-imported from the Continent, and like the plague which was wont to
-be imported from Turkey, infected our capital. To lay an embargo
-upon sound was impossible; to make an echo perform quarantine,
-ridiculous!--he took a better mode, drew up song against sing-song,
-and to the soft sonnetteering stanza of Italy, opposed the nervous
-old ballad of Britain. He brought into the field the whole force
-of three kingdoms, and took his tunes from the most popular songs
-of the ancient bards of England, Scotland, and Wales. _Britons
-strike home_ was the word; _Chevy Chase_ led the van, was followed
-by a _Soldier and a Sailor_ singing _All Joy to great Cæsar_, and
-chorussed by _Shenkin of a Noble Race_; when _An old Woman clothed
-in Gray_, with a _Bonny Broom_ in her hand, swept the whole swarm
-of buzzing caterpillars _Over the Hills and far away_. Goldoni's
-opera, I VIAGGIATORI RIDICOLI TORNATI IN ITALIA,[219] was in a degree
-realized.[220]
-
-For Italian music, William Hogarth had about as much respect as John
-Gay, and was therefore so well pleased with a subject which threw it
-into ridicule, that he not only painted it three times, but has in
-several of his miscellaneous prints made these senseless sounds one
-great object of his satire.
-
-The picture from which this is copied was painted in the year 1729,
-for Mr. Rich of Covent Garden Theatre; at the sale of his effects
-in 1762, it was purchased by the late Duke of Leeds,[221] and is
-at this time (1806) in the collection of the noble peer who now
-bears that title. When the late Duke permitted Messrs. Boydell to
-copy it, the print was engraved by Mr. Blake. To these volumes
-is annexed an outline descriptive of the characters, which it is
-therefore unnecessary to enumerate in this page.[222] They afford a
-good example of the dresses, and what was then called the dignified
-manner, of the old school. That any woman should admire such a figure
-as Mr. Walker in Macheath, must excite a degree of astonishment;
-but to believe for a moment that so attractive a female as Miss
-Fenton would choose such an Adonis,[223] must, even in the year 1727,
-require a very large portion of dramatic faith. Her charms have
-fascinated the Duke of Bolton: his eye is fixed on her face, and his
-mind wholly engrossed by the contemplation of that beauty which he
-afterwards made his own. Mr. Rich, and Mr. Cock the auctioneer, are
-properly enough represented as totally inattentive to the scene.
-The poet immediately behind them, saturated by public approbation,
-pays no greater regard to the performance than is displayed by
-the manager. It had made _Gay rich_, and _Rich gay_, and that was
-sufficient.
-
-As Hogarth was invariably faithful in delineating what he saw, I dare
-believe the characters are represented as they were. Considered in
-that point, without regard to other merit, it has quite as much value
-as many groups of portraits which are published in this our day, and
-denominated "Historical Pictures."
-
-In the beginning of the year 1729, Hogarth painted for a Sir
-Archibald Grant two original pictures, "The Committee,"[224] and the
-"Beggars' Opera;" but though Sir Archibald paid half-price for them
-at the time he gave the order, I cannot positively assert that they
-were ever in his possession, for they afterwards got into the hands
-of Mr. Huggins, at the sale of whose effects the latter was purchased
-by Doctor Monkhouse, of Queen's College, Oxford. It has a frame with
-a carved bust of Gay at the top. The late Horace Lord Orford had a
-sketch of a scene in the same play.
-
-
-THE INDIAN EMPEROR; OR, THE CONQUEST OF MEXICO:
-
-[Illustration: THE CONQUEST OF MEXICO.]
-
-_As performed at Mr. Conduit's, Master of the Mint, before the Duke
-of Cumberland, etc._
-
- DRAMATIS PERSONÆ.
-
- CORTEZ. CYDARIA. ALMERIA. ALIBECK.
-
-ACT. IV.--SCENE 4th.--_A Prison._
-
-CYDARIA.
-
- "More cruel than the tiger o'er his spoil,
- And falser than the weeping crocodile;
- Can you add vanity to guilt, and take
- A pride to hear the conquests which you make?
- Go; publish your renown, let it be said
- You have a woman, and that lov'd betray'd."
-
-CORTEZ.
-
- "With what injustice is my faith accused!
- Life! freedom! empire! I at once refus'd;
- And would again ten thousand times for you."
-
-ALMERIA.
-
- "She'll have too great content to find him true;
- And therefore since his love is not for me,
- I'll help to make my rival's misery.
- Spaniard, I never thought you false before;
- Can you at once two mistresses adore?
- Keep the poor soul no longer in suspense,
- Your change is such, it does not need defence."
-
-The scene of Hogarth's last drama was Newgate; and in this it is a
-Mexican prison, where his pigmy personages are playing their little
-parts in one of Dryden's heroic tragedies.
-
-That these minor performers should prefer rhyme to prose, I can
-readily conceive--the jingling of verse is a great help to your short
-memory; but that Dryden, "the great high priest of all the Nine,"
-should so far deviate from nature and outrage common sense as thus
-to fetter his dramatic dialogue, is to be accounted for on no other
-principle than the vile taste of Charles the Second's vile Court. The
-play is dedicated to the most excellent and most illustrious Princess
-Anne, Duchess of Monmouth and Buccleuch, wife to the most illustrious
-and high-born James Duke of Monmouth; and by that dedication[225]
-appears to have been warmly patronized by the most eminent persons of
-wit and honour.
-
-It is a sequel to the _Indian Queen_, written by Dryden and Sir
-Robert Howard, which was published two years before. Of this
-connection between the two tragedies, notice was given to the
-audience by printed bills distributed at the door,[226]--an
-expedient which the Duke of Buckingham very happily ridicules in
-_The Rehearsal_, when Bayes boasts of the number of bills he has
-printed, to instil into the audience some conception of his plot. By
-the age of the warlike William of Cumberland, I conjecture that these
-embryotic heroes and heroines strutted away their little hour about
-the year 1731; and though the play which they are enacting is beneath
-the blazing genius of John Dryden, it is well worthy the puny powers
-of these puny performers.[227] Lady Sophia Fermor, who plays the
-part of Almeria, in 1744 married Lord Granville, and died in 1750.
-The prompter was a Mr. T. Hill; and though this reverend gentleman is
-in rather too conspicuous a situation, he is not quite so obtrusive
-an object as the prompter at the Opera House. The governess playing
-with one of the children was Lady Deloraine. Miss Conduit, who
-appears as Alibeck, was daughter to Catherine, the niece of Sir Isaac
-Newton, and in 1740 married Lord Lymington, eldest son to John first
-Earl of Portsmouth.
-
-The names and additions of three of the auditors are inserted under
-the small print. One of the figures has a resemblance to the courtly
-Lord Chesterfield. Upon the chimney-piece is the bust of Sir Isaac
-Newton, and it is fair to conjecture that the two framed portraits
-represent Mr. and Mrs. Conduit.
-
-The figure leaning on the back of a chair is said to be intended for
-the Duke of Montagu; and the two in the background, for the Duke and
-Duchess of Richmond.
-
-Hogarth's original painting is the property of Lord Holland.
-
-[Illustration: (end of chapter floral icon)]
-
-
-
-
-THE END.
-
-
-The writer of this catalogue is now come to his last chapter, and has
-before him the last plate that Hogarth engraved, which is properly
-denominated the _Finis_ to that great painter's works.
-
-Of the various opinions which the numerous readers of these his
-volumes will form at this his conclusion, he can have no certain
-judgment; but fears that some of them may be thus anticipated.
-
-The votary of comedy, who considers Hogarth as a mere burlesque
-painter, with whom he only wishes to laugh, will deem this book
-too grave; while the saturnine spirit, that looks at him as a
-mere sermonic moralist, will say it is not grave enough. The man
-who supposes that every character was individual, and expects the
-scandalous chronicle of those who were satirized by the artist, will
-probably complain that there is too little anecdote; while he that
-considers this as a frivolous, gossiping, and anecdotish age, will
-say there is too much.
-
-Some will observe that these volumes are too long, and in the
-style of a tired mariner, exult that they see land. In this their
-exultation the writer most sincerely participates, but at the same
-time acknowledges (so predominant is vanity) that he trusts there
-are who would not regret if the work were still longer, who will
-correct what they find erroneous without triumphing in their superior
-sagacity, and candidly forgive the writer's weakness without too much
-glorying in their own strength.
-
-From the pedantic and quizzical connoisseur I expect no mercy, but
-suppose that the book and the writer will be arraigned and condemned
-in manner and form following:--
-
-"I took up these volumes with the expectation of seeing all the
-characters that Hogarth introduced determined, and all his variations
-recorded. With respect to the characters, some are mistaken, and
-others are omitted; and as to the variations, few are noticed.[228]
-Concerning a multitude of invaluable prints, which have singly
-produced three times as much as the volume of his prints in their
-present state sells for, there is not even a catalogue; there are
-many pages of extraneous matter, which I had not patience to read;
-every iota of Hogarth I understood without the assistance of this
-book."
-
-With all possible humility the author declareth, that for your use or
-benefit he did not compile it.
-
- "Laugh where you may, be candid where you can."
-
-That you may know some of the characters of which the writer is
-ignorant, he willingly acknowledges; that you may guess at many,
-where he sees no ground for conjecture, he cheerfully admits; and
-that both you and himself are very frequently mistaken, he firmly
-believes.
-
-The prints are described as they are copied from the present state
-of the plates, and the material alterations incidentally noticed.
-However great the merit of the tankards and teapots, the waiters and
-coats of arms, to reduce them did not come into the present plan; to
-commemorate them was unnecessary.[229] The author of these volumes,
-from the day he has written man, inspected the works of Hogarth with
-delight, but was not fully conscious of their superlative merit
-until the compilation of these remarks, in the progress of which
-his duty to the public obliged him to examine their design, and
-endeavour to illustrate their tendency. In this he has engaged with
-the consciousness that there would be error,--which to such a work is
-necessarily attached.
-
-To those readers who are not too fastidious to peruse it with this
-allowance, or who have not hitherto looked at Hogarth with the
-attention he merits, it is addressed. If it impels them to more
-minute inspection of his works, the purpose is answered.
-
-Yes, great and unrivalled genius! every contemplation of thy works
-must be succeeded by admiration!
-
-
-THE BATHOS, OR MANNER OF SINKING IN SUBLIME PAINTINGS.[231]
-
- _Inscribed to the dealers in dark pictures._
-
-[Illustration: THE BATHOS.]
-
-In five compartments beneath the title are the following
-inscriptions:--
-
-In the dexter corner is a pyramidical shell inscribed: "The conic
-form in which the Goddess of Beauty was worshipped by the ancients
-at Paphos in the Island of Cyprus. See the medal struck when a Roman
-emperor visited the temple."
-
-"Simulacrum Deæ non effigie humana, continuus orbis latiori initio
-tenuem in ambitum meta modo, exsurgens et ratio in obscuro."--TACIT.
-_Hist._ lib. 2.
-
-In the sinister corner is a white pyramid, round which is twisted the
-favourite serpentine line inscribed:--
-
-"A copy of the precise line of Beauty, as it is represented on the
-first explanatory plate of the 'Analysis of Beauty.'"
-
-"Venus a Paphiis colitur, cujus simulacrum nulli rei magis assimile,
-quam albæ Pyramidi."--MAXIMUS TYRIUS, _Ann._ 157.
-
-"_Note._--The similarity of these two conic figures did not occur
-to the author till two or three years after the publication of the
-_Analysis_ in 1754."
-
-Thus conclude the inscriptions. We will next inquire into the motives
-by which the artist was actuated, and the subjects he has intended to
-satirize in this his concluding enigmatical and pun-ical print.
-
- * * * * *
-
-The labours of this great painter to the passions are now at an end;
-and this is the last page of his eventful and instructive histories.
-Those which he had formed into a series, added to the single prints,
-portraits, etc., had become so numerous as to form a large volume.
-A concluding plate seemed necessary; and we are told that, a few
-months before he was seized with that malady which deprived society
-of one of its greatest ornaments, he had in contemplation a last
-engraving. After a dinner with a few social friends at his own table,
-enjoying
-
- "The feast of reason, and the flow of soul,"
-
-the board crowned with wine, and each glass circulating convivial
-cheerfulness, he was asked, "What will be the subject of your next
-print?" "The end of all things!" was his reply. "If that should be
-the case," added one of his friends, "your business will be finished,
-for there will be an end of the painter." With a look that conveyed
-a consciousness of approaching dissolution, and a deep sigh, he
-answered, "There will so; and therefore, the sooner my work is done
-the better." With this impulse he next day began this plate, and
-seeming to consider it as a terminus to his fame, never turned to the
-right or left until he arrived at the end of his journey.
-
-The aim of this _Omega_ to his own alphabet was twofold; to bring
-together every object which denoted the end of time, and throw a
-ridicule upon the bathos and profundity of the ancient masters.
-
-That the bathos is not confined to the poet, but hath at sundry times
-and in divers manners been of sovereign use to the painter, I am well
-convinced. My opinion was originally formed upon the inspection of
-many ancient and modern pictures, innumerable volumes of ancient and
-modern prints, and an annual attendance at the Royal Exhibition: it
-was confirmed by the perusal of some papers on the arts, which came
-into my possession by one of those fortunate accidents that happen
-to few men above once in their lives. Walking some years ago through
-Harp Alley, I observed a porter carrying an old trunk without a
-cover, in which was a little picture in a broad and deep ebony frame,
-a few mutilated pamphlets, a parcel of prints, and an old manuscript
-volume bound in vellum. He laid down his load at a broker's shop; I
-inspected it, and seeing the book inscribed "Mart. Scrib.," purchased
-the whole lot, took a hackney coach, and joyfully conveyed my prize
-home. Eagerly inspecting the contents, I found the picture was Dutch,
-and turned to a tint sombre as the frame: by the help of clear water
-I brought out the colours, and--
-
- "Oh! Jephtha, judge of Israel,--what a treasure!"
-
-To have painted it, must have been the labour of a long life. Such a
-green stall!--such a cabbage!--a cauliflower!--a string of Spanish
-onions!--a bunch of carrots!--a lobster!--a brass kettle!--and
-a sunflower!--I never beheld before. So clear! transparent!
-vivid!--It was forcible as Rembrandt! brilliant as Rubens!--and for
-finishing--the most accurate works of Denner!--the most delicate
-pencilling of the Chevalier Vanderweff!--compared with this charming
-_tableau_, would appear hasty sketches.
-
-The pamphlets were German, and touched of the transmutation of
-metals; to discover which, who can calculate the loads of charcoal
-that have been burnt, the retorts that have been burst, or the heads
-that have been turned? That this grand arcanum of nature will at
-some future day be revealed, I have no doubt; and there is little
-reason to fear but the benefit of the discovery will be reaped by
-this island;--because, Britain is highly favoured by the gods; and
-several great calculators have clearly proved, that without some
-such miraculous assistance, Britain must be undone by her enormous
-national debt.
-
-The prints were Flemish; but these subjects are foreign to my
-manuscript. First craving pardon for the digression, to that I
-proceed.
-
-By time[232] it was turned to the colour of old parchment, but that
-it was written by the righte cunnynge hand of Martinus Scriblerus
-there can be little doubt.
-
-When he sent some literary memoranda to Arbuthnot,[233] he
-recommended to the Doctor "the recovery of others which lay
-straggling about the world."[234]
-
-Let it be also remembered, that though this prodigy of science
-presented to our English Cervantes numerous tracts, he might not
-think the Doctor would have a proper value for those on painting.
-That Martinus was a competent judge of the fine arts, is proved by
-his fifth chapter on Sinking in Poetry. Now as the family of the
-Scribleri, with all their alliances and collateral relations, have
-time immemorial been distinguished for the _cacoëthes scribendi_ of
-whatever he was a judge, certes he would write, and that which he
-hath written I have happily preserved. A few extracts[235] which
-I have inserted will give a general idea of the whole, which is
-entitled, THE ART OF SINKING IN PAINTING; and is thus introduced in
-the _Prolegomena_:--
-
- "Great and manifold have been the benefits (my dear countryman)
- which poesy hath derived from that innumerable army of critics
- and commentators, who fabricated fences to keep her in bounds,
- and bore blazing torches to irradiate her path. Lamentable is it
- to consider how few lights have been held out to her sister art;
- who, notwithstanding an equal or prior claim, hath been suffered
- to wander through her dreary night with no other illumination
- than the glow-worm on the bank, or the _ignis fatuus_ in the
- ditches. For the use and service of the poet there is an ocean
- of commentary; while the painter hath no other stream in which to
- slake his thirst for instruction than that which creeps among the
- weeds in the meadow, or gurgles over the pebbles in the valley.
-
- "From intense application to the mysterious tablets of my great
- ancestors, for ages professors of astrology and chemistry in the
- universities of Germany, I am empowered to see by anticipation.
-
- "For me it is decreed to strike the rock of nature with the rod
- of science, and liberate the fountain of truth, whose waters
- shall fertilize this ungenial isle. Ye whose well-poised pinions
- enable you to soar above this our terrestrial globe, and dip your
- pencils in the rainbow! come and contemplate the magic mirror of
- Martinus Scriblerus.
-
- "Conscious am I that this our divine muse, who hath not unaptly
- been styled journeywoman to Nature, is now in a profound sleep;
- but in the coming century she shall awake from her trance,
- shake the dust from her many-coloured mantle, and dazzle the
- surrounding nations. Blest with the power of penetrating the
- cloud of time, which is impervious to vulgar sight, I see, as
- in a vision, the wonders of another age; and should these my
- lucubrations be neglected by my contemporaries, happy am I in
- the confidence that by their posterity they will be properly
- estimated, and sought for as were the Sibyl's leaves, regarded as
- the oracles of Apollo, and considered as the touchstone of true
- taste. To the age of whom they are worthy, and who are worthy of
- them, I dedicate these my labours.
-
- "The few who have written upon the fine arts have endeavoured to
- inculcate simplicity of action, anatomical correctness, symmetry
- of parts, harmony of colouring, easy folding of drapery, and due
- attention to the grouping of figures. These rules can only be
- classed among the idle dreams of visionary speculation; resign
- yourselves unto my guidance, and listen unto the lessons of truth.
-
- "In every animal there is an original instinct, tending towards
- that for which it was by nature designed. In man, there is a
- natural bias to the bathos; but he must be instructed, or rather
- compelled into any relish or taste for what is denominated the
- sublime.
-
- "To prove this my position, show a collection of drawings or
- paintings to a child: it will be irresistibly attracted by
- glittering colours, forced expressions, and grotesque, or what
- are commonly called caricatured countenances. Let the savage, who
- is not vitiated by idle rules, and has never seen painted canvas,
- be taken into a picture-gallery,--his natural taste will lead him
- to similar objects. What the artists call a quiet picture, he
- will quietly pass; but let the figures be crowded, the attitudes
- extravagant, and the colours gaudy,--his attention and admiration
- are ensured.
-
- "These facts being admitted, and they cannot be denied, why
- should we not take the genuine undebauched disposition of man
- in his original state of simplicity, as a better criterion of
- truth than that ideal nature which hath misled many painters
- and writers; of whose fantastic dogmas I cannot too strongly
- caution you to beware. Should you, in the course of your early
- studies, have contracted any of this ancient _ærugo_,--it is
- corrosive,--consider it as the dross of science, and scatter
- it in the air, for with my precepts it cannot coalesce. Ideal
- beauty is a childish absurdity. Painting is, or ought to be, an
- imitation of nature; and that can never be a good picture which
- representeth things that never did or can exist."
-
-After many more pages to the same purport, this great philosopher
-divideth his subject. The table of contents to a few of his chapters,
-which will give a general idea of his plan, is hereunto annexed:--
-
- "CHAP. 1.--_Of the Story._
-
- "The principal character in your piece should be an illustrious
- person; but as great men may sometimes, for their recreation and
- diversion, or worse purposes, be taken up in mean and trivial
- matters, in such situations, it is proved from many right worthy
- examples, they may and ought to be delineated. The Emperor
- Domitian should be represented killing flies; Nero, playing upon
- the fiddle; Julius Cæsar, kicking a football; and Commodus, at a
- bull-baiting.
-
-
- "CHAP. 2.--_Relateth unto the Allegory._
-
- "To raise an historical picture above vulgar expression, it
- should be seasoned with allegory, and elevated with metaphorical
- allusions and figures.
-
-
- "CHAP. 3.--_Of the Time._
-
- "In this there should be variety; and if your story have not
- a sufficient number of great and famous persons to render it
- important and interesting, you may embellish it with such
- portraitures as suit your purpose. Their not having lived in the
- same age or nation is of little import.
-
-
- "CHAP. 4.--_Of the Machinery._
-
- "The machinery, _id est_, the celestial and infernal powers,
- must be brought into your picture on every great or difficult
- occasion. This will not only give your delineation a classical
- and learned air, but account for any wonderful action which
- the world might think your hero could not perform without
- supernatural assistance.
-
-
- "CHAP. 5.--_Treateth of the Episode._
-
- "To vary the pleasure of the spectator, an historical picture
- should be diversified with an episode; especial care being taken
- that it have no congruity with the main subject; for the name
- deriveth from that which is superadded to the original plan, and
- ought no more to appear a part of it than an insect appeareth as
- a part of the animal unto which it adhereth.
-
-
- "CHAP. 6.--_Describeth the nature and end of the Hyperbola, or
- Impossible._
-
- "This image is of eminent use in giving a cast of grandeur and
- greatness to what would, without it, appear trivial and mean.
- It excites astonishment; and the majority of mankind being most
- delighted with that which is most marvellous, is a good and
- sufficient cause for your works being well strewed with wonders."
-
-For the contents of eighteen succeeding chapters, treating of the
-cumbrous, the inflated, the glittering, the infantine, the pun-ical,
-the vulgar, and sundry other styles, I have not room, but quitting
-the bathos of Martinus Scriblerus, must proceed unto that of William
-Hogarth.
-
-It is well worthy of the title, for a more heterogeneous compound of
-ludicrous and serious objects was never displayed in one print.
-
-Some of his images the artist has gleaned from the common field of
-the poor company of punsters, and for others hath soared into the
-lofty regions of mythological allegory. He ascends from an inch of
-candle setting fire to a print, to the chariot of the sun, which,
-with Apollo Pæan and his three fiery coursers, sinks into endless
-night. Mounts from the cobbler's end, twisted round a wooden last,
-to the world's end, elegantly exemplified by a bursting globe on an
-alehouse sign. He has contrasted the worn-out brush with the broken
-crown; and opposed to the empty purse a commission of bankrupt,
-which, sanctioned with the great seal of a hero upon a white horse,
-is issued and awarded against Nature,--by Heaven knows who! He has
-joined the huge cracked bell of the cathedral to the broken bottle of
-the tavern; and set in opposition to the mutilated column and capital
-of Ionia, the rope's end of a man-of-war. The bow which, drawn by
-the old English archer, gave force fraught with death to the barbed
-arrow, is unstrung and broken. The mutilated firelock, divested of
-its tube, shall no more thin the ranks of contending armies. The
-tottering tower, funeral yew, death's head, cross-bones, and "_Hic
-jacet_" of a country churchyard, are opposed by the hard-worn besom,
-blighted oaks, falling sign-post, and unthatched cottage. In what
-painters call the sky, we have not only the son of Latona, but Luna
-in a veil: in the distance a ship is sinking into the bed of the
-ocean, and a gibbet is erected on the shore; to this, in conformity
-with the wise institutions of our polished ancestors, and for the
-luxury of those strong-beaked birds that feast their young with
-blood,--a lord of the creation is suspended.[236] ONCE,--
-
- "On our quick'st decrees
- The inaudible and noiseless foot of Time
- Stole, ere we could effect them."
-
-NOW,--his scythe, tube, and hour-glass being broken, his progress is
-ended! his sinews are unstrung! his hour of dissolution arrived!--and
-with those five _capital letters_ that have concluded the labours of
-so many learned authors, and which conjoined form the word FINIS,--
-
- "He ends his mortal coil, and breathes his last!"
-
-By his will,--The great globe itself, and all which it inherits, is
-bequeathed to Chaos,--appointed sole executor;--and this, his last
-act, is witnessed by the _Parcæ_.
-
-The print of "The Times," that gave rise to so much unmerited
-abuse of this wonderful painter and excellent man, is in a blaze.
-The palette on which he spread the varying tints of many-coloured
-life--broken;--the whip of satire, armed with which he
-
- "Dar'd the rage
- Of the bad men of this degenerate age,"
-
-and scourged those that were safe from the law, and laughed at the
-gospel;--the whip of satire--divested of its lash, lies unheeded on
-the earth.
-
-The book of Nature, in which he was so deeply read, and from whence
-he drew all his images, is open at the last page. The characters that
-compose his pictured tragi-comedies have passed in review before us,
-and with the words engraven on the last leaf of that volume which he
-so well studied, I will conclude this--
-
-
-EXEUNT OMNES.
-
-[Illustration: _HOGARTH'S CREST._]
-
-
-
-
-FOOTNOTES:
-
-[1] From some late examples in our courts of justice, I have thought
-it barely possible that this dignified descendant of crowned heads,
-at the same time that he is admiring his own person, may be observing
-the Counsellor's attention to his lady, and hoping that he shall find
-some future opportunity of detecting her infidelity and obtaining
-a divorce. But this is merely conjecture. I wish, for the honour
-of human nature, that there had been no example to justify such a
-suspicion.
-
-[2] The following whimsical imitation of Chaucer was written, I
-believe, by Hermes Harris:--
-
- "Right welle my lerned clerkis it is said,
- That womanhoode for manne his use was made;
- But naughtie manne liketh not one, or soe,
- But wisheth aye unthriftilie for mo;
- And when by holie church to one he's tied,
- Then for his soule he cannot her abide.
- Thus when a dogge first lighteth on a bone,
- His taile he waggeth,--gladde thereof y-growne;
- But if thilke bone untoe his taile thou tie,
- Pardie, he fearing it, away doth flie."
-
-
-[3] Hogarth might intend by this, and the improprieties and
-violations of order in the unfinished building seen out of a window,
-to hint at the absurdities of the then fashionable architect, William
-Kent. As a painter Kent was beneath satire, as an architect he was
-above it; but he was protected by Lord Burlington, patronized by Lord
-Pembroke, and employed by all who aspired to a character for _virtu_.
-Hogarth saw with disgust bordering upon indignation that his taste in
-one art, modern gardening (of which he was the acknowledged father),
-procured him the reputation of excellence in another, in which he
-was grossly ignorant and glaringly erroneous. In some of the grounds
-laid out by Kent's directions, he realized that Paradise which Milton
-had described; his patrons saw that he could improve nature in their
-plantations, and very kindly gave him credit for a power which he
-never possessed--that of giving an imitation of nature on his canvas.
-By the Dryades his sacrifice had been accepted; but the offering
-he laid upon the altar sacred to the fine arts was rejected with
-disdain. It was the praise of Hercules that he destroyed monsters and
-discomfited giants; it was the praise of William Kent that he cleared
-our gardens of their representatives. Before his time the plantations
-round the seats of our nobility were a kind of vernal menagerie:
-the lion shook his shaggy mane in yew; the dragon waved his wings
-in evergreen; and in box, the wild boar displayed his bristled neck
-and tusks terrific. Our disciple of true taste cleared away these
-fantastic forms, and in their place gave us nature,--"nature to
-advantage dressed." But when consulted about interior decorations,
-his taste evaporated. The heavy canopy over the nobleman's head, the
-ponderous chairs and massy frames which decorate the room, are from
-his designs. In some of the old houses of our ancient nobility we see
-furniture of a similar appearance, though the greatest part of it,
-after passing through the purgatory of a broker's shop, has either
-been placed in very inferior situations or consigned to the flames.
-
-Of Kent's abilities as a painter the public thought so highly,
-that he was absurdly enough opposed to Sir James Thornhill. This
-circumstance might be one source of Hogarth's dislike; he, however,
-took an early opportunity of showing it, by what is called a
-"Burlesque of Kent's Altarpiece at St. Clement's Church," but which
-Hogarth declared to be a fair delineation of the original. A reduced
-copy is in vol. iii. of this work; see p. 17 of the 2d edition.
-
-[4] Some of the portraits of Louis XIV. are quite as absurd. We are
-told that he once sent to Rome for Poussin, to paint him in the
-character of Jupiter. This great artist obeyed the summons, and
-prepared his canvas and colours; when, to his extreme astonishment,
-the monarch informed him that, although he was to be delineated as
-the representative of Jove, etiquette did not permit him to appear
-without his major peruke, and he must consequently be so painted.
-Poussin, not able to conceive any way of giving appropriate dignity
-to the thunderer of Olympus with this flowing appendage, declined
-beginning the picture, and returned to Rome without making his
-_congé_.
-
-[5] By the loose negligence of her habit, and some circumstances,
-I am inclined to think the artist intended to represent her as
-pregnant. It has been said that after Baron had finished the plate,
-Mr. Hogarth added a lock of hair with Indian ink, but after a few
-impressions were taken off, inserted this supplemental ornament with
-the graver. In his _Analysis of Beauty_, he makes a remark which
-in some degree accounts for the introduction of this fascinating
-attraction:--
-
-"It was once the fashion to have two curls of equal size, stuck at
-the same height close upon the forehead, which probably took its rise
-from seeing the pretty effect of curls falling loosely over the face.
-
-"A lock of hair falling thus across the temples, and by that means
-breaking the regularity of the oval, has an effect too alluring to
-be strictly decent, as is very well known to the loose and lowest
-classes of women; but being paired in so stiff a manner as they
-formerly were, they lost the desired effect, and ill deserved the
-name of ornaments."
-
-Moralists of different nations have considered hair as calculated to
-entangle hearts, and one of our pious writers of the last century
-wrote a furious treatise on the _un_loveliness of love-locks.
-
-[6] A chair kicked down, an _Essay on Whist_, cards scattered on the
-floor, and the general confusion of everything in the room, seem
-to intimate that this _right honourable society_ were actuated by
-passions somewhat similar to those which inflame the gentlemen in the
-sixth plate of "The Rake's Progress." Though a genuine gamester is
-not apt to lose his presence of mind on slight occasions, yet when a
-man of rank is stripped of sums that will draw into their vortex many
-anticipated years of his revenue, he is liable to lose his temper,
-and on such occasions apt to vent his spleen on inanimate objects.
-Such things sometimes happen even now.
-
-[7] Absurd as this may seem, yet until Mr. Wedgwood introduced those
-beautiful Etruscan forms which now decorate the rooms, and form the
-taste of the possessors, these shapeless monsters disgraced the most
-splendid apartments in the metropolis.
-
-[8] "Kent was not only consulted for furniture, as frames of
-pictures, glasses, tables, chairs, etc., but for plate, for a barge,
-for a cradle. So impetuous was fashion, that two great ladies
-prevailed on him to make designs for their birthday gowns. The one
-he dressed in a petticoat decorated with columns of the five orders;
-the other, like a bronze, in copper-coloured satin, with ornaments of
-gold."--Walpole's _Anecdotes_, 2d edit., vol. iv. p. 239.
-
-[9] This race still roll round the metropolis; and while some put
-their trust in chariots, horses, and impudence, others depend on the
-credulity of his Majesty's liege subjects.
-
-The following epitaph was written for one of them:--
-
- Beneath lies lean old Fillgrave, once M.D.,
- Who hunger felt much oft'ner than a fee;
- These were the last, last words the doctor spoke
- (And, believe me, sirs, the sentence was no joke),
- "The world I leave, but can't the world forgive,
- For by my patients I could never live."
- In this rejoin'd a friend, "You'd but your due;
- Your patients, doctor, ne'er could live by you."--E.
-
-
-[10] It is said to have been designed for the once celebrated
-Betty Careless, and the remark is supposed to be countenanced by
-the initials E. C. on her bosom. This woman, by a transmigration
-as natural as is that of the chrysalis, from being one of the most
-fashionable of the Cyprian corps, became keeper of a brothel; and
-after repeated arrests and many imprisonments, was buried from the
-poorhouse of St. Paul's, Covent Garden, April 22, 1752. In many of
-the elegant Latin odes of Loveling her name is immortalized; and of
-her person and appearance Fielding thus speaks in his _Amelia_:--
-
-"I happened in my youth to sit behind two ladies in a side-box at
-a play, where, in a balcony on the opposite side, was placed the
-inimitable Betsy Careless, in company with a young fellow of no very
-formal or indeed sober appearance. One of the ladies, I remember,
-said to the other, 'Did you ever see anything look so modest and so
-innocent as that girl over the way? What pity it is such a creature
-should be in the way of ruin, as I am afraid she is by being alone
-with that young fellow.'
-
-"Now this lady was no bad physiognomist: for it was impossible to
-conceive a greater appearance of modesty, innocence, and simplicity
-than what nature had displayed in the countenance of that girl, and
-yet, all appearances notwithstanding, I myself (remember, critic, it
-was in my youth) had, a few mornings before, seen that very identical
-picture of those engaging qualities in bed with a rake at a bagnio,
-smoking tobacco, drinking punch, talking obscenity, and swearing and
-cursing with all the impudence and impiety of the lowest and most
-abandoned trull of a soldier."
-
-Hogarth noticed this woman in a former print: one of the madmen in
-the last plate of "The Rake's Progress" has written "Charming Betsy
-Careless" on the rail of the stairs, and wears her portrait suspended
-to a riband tied round his neck. Mrs. Heywood's _Betsy Thoughtless_
-was in MS. entitled _Betsy Careless_; but, from the infamy at that
-time annexed to the name, had a new baptism. There are those who
-say that the letters upon this woman's bosom are not E. C. but F.
-C., and intended to designate Fanny Cock, daughter of Mr. Cock the
-auctioneer, with whom the artist had a casual disagreement. After
-all these conjectures, I think it is probable that these gunpowder
-initials are merely the marks of a woman of the lowest rank and most
-infamous description.
-
-[11] From the gallows, immediately over his head, we are led to
-suppose the artist intended to hint that this gentleman died for
-the good of his country; but from the records of some of our
-mortuary historians, it appears that about the time this set of
-prints were published, a number of bodies thus preserved, which had
-been exsiccated by some mode of embalming at present unknown, were
-discovered in a vault in Whitechapel Church.
-
-[12] This royal mummy, being once the sole tenant of one of the
-largest pyramids, might be more positively ascertained than any of
-the Cleopatras. It was, however, profanely removed by a wild Arab,
-who, after he had stolen it, sold it to the Consul of Alexandria,
-by whom it was transmitted to England: and a right grave antiquary
-quotes a passage in Sandys' _Travels_ to prove its being genuine;
-where that learned and accurate voyager assures us that he saw the
-sepulchre empty, "which agrees exactly," saith he, "with the theft
-above mentioned." He omits to observe that Herodotus tells the same
-thing of it in his time.
-
-[13] Carestini.
-
-[14] A short time before the publication of these prints, the
-greatest part of our nobility acted as if they had been bitten
-by a tarantula. The sums lavished upon exotic warblers would
-have supported an army; the applause bestowed upon some of them
-would have turned the brain of a saint. It was little short of
-adoration. Persons of inferior rank caught this jingling contagion,
-and all orders of the people were infected with a musical mania,
-totally foreign to our national taste, and highly dishonourable
-to our national character. In one of Hogarth's former prints is a
-list of the rich presents Signior Farinelli, the Italian singer,
-condescended to accept from the English nobility and gentry for one
-night's performance in the opera of _Artaxerxes!_ comprising gold
-snuff-boxes, diamond rings, diamond buckles, etc. That such presents
-were actually made is ascertained by the newspapers of the day.
-
-[15] The group of which this is composed is worthy observation.
-The Counsellor is pointing to a friar and a nun who are in close
-conversation.
-
-[16] Mrs. Lane (afterwards Lady Bingley).
-
-[17] Fox Lane, her husband.
-
-[18] Weideman.
-
-[19] This curious delineation is whimsically placed immediately over
-the head of the Italian.
-
-[20] Of the wisdom displayed in this judgment much has been said;
-I have sometimes thought that a decision of the great Frederick of
-Prussia's was equally deserving of record. When a list of criminals,
-who had forfeited their lives by violating the laws of their country,
-was once brought to him to sign, he observed the name of a soldier
-convicted of sacrilege.--"That a soldier of mine should be guilty of
-so atrocious a crime," said the king, "astonishes and distresses me.
-I will not, however, sign his death-warrant until I have examined him
-in person." The man was accordingly brought into the royal presence,
-and two monks, who were his accusers, declared that he had come
-into their church during the time they were celebrating mass, and
-placed himself under an image of the Virgin Mary, from whose shoes
-he had privately taken two pearl bows, and carried them out of the
-church: they pursued him, and found them in his pocket. The king,
-turning to the criminal, desired to know what he had to say in his
-defence? which was simply this: that he was a disbanded soldier, and
-in great distress for a dinner: that he walked into the churchyard,
-and earnestly prayed to the Virgin Mary that she would put him in
-the way of getting one: that she appeared to him, and told him she
-heard his supplications, and pitied his distress; to relieve which,
-she begged him to accept of some pearls which were on the feet of
-her image in the neighbouring church. When the doors opened, he
-walked into the church and took them out of her shoes, with an
-intention of converting them into money. "This," said the king,
-"alters the face of the business; but tell me, most reverend fathers,
-for you undoubtedly know, is it according to your canons possible
-that the Virgin could, to relieve distress and preserve a life,
-appear to this poor man in the way he describes?"--"Undoubtedly,
-my liege, she could, but it is not probable that she did." "Is it
-possible?"--"Certainly." "Very well. I will not let a soldier of mine
-suffer death upon probabilities. He shall be discharged this time;
-but observe what I say to you, young man; if at any future period I
-find that you accept another present from either virgin, saint, or
-angel, you shall be hanged."
-
-[21] It is said to be copied from the frontispiece to a twopenny
-history of the notified Moll Flanders; but I do not remember
-seeing it among Mr. Gulston's two-and-twenty thousand portraits of
-illustrious characters.
-
-[22] This is one among many proofs of Mr. Hogarth's close attention
-to those little markings which have been generally disregarded
-by other artists. By a fire in the room he fixes the time to be
-winter,--a season in which those exotic amusements, masquerades, are
-most frequent in the metropolis.
-
-[23] "If he do not become a cart as well as another man--a plague on
-his bringing up!"
-
-[24] A brawn's head, with an orange in its mouth, was at that time a
-fashionable winter dish; and it was a standing dish which might be
-marched from the pantry to the parlour, and give the semblance of
-plenty for forty days. This was perhaps one reason for our votary of
-Mammon making it the leading article in his bill of fare; the rest
-and residue of his feast is made up by a solitary egg.
-
-A boiled egg was the usual dinner of Sir Hans Sloane. When he once
-complained to Dr. Mortimer that all his friends had deserted him, the
-Doctor observed that Chelsea was a considerable distance from the
-residence of most of them, and therefore they might be disappointed
-when they came to find he had so slight a dinner. This gentle
-remonstrance put the old Baronet in a rage, and he exclaimed, "Keep a
-table! Invite people to dinner! Would you have me ruin myself? Public
-credit totters already, and if (as has been presaged) there should be
-a national bankruptcy, or a sponge to wipe out the national debt, you
-may yet see me in a workhouse." His landed estate was at that time
-very considerable, and his museum worth much more than the twenty
-thousand pounds which was, however, given for it by Parliament.
-
-Scanty as is our citizen's dinner, his table-cloth is ample. The
-founder of Guy's Hospital, which is the first private foundation in
-the world, was not so extravagant. His constant substitute for a
-table-cloth was either a dirty proof sheet of some book or an old
-newspaper.
-
-[25] Let not any censure fall upon Mr. Hogarth for these indelicate
-representations. He evidently means to burlesque the gross and
-ridiculous absurdities of the Dutch painters.
-
-[26] These canine unfortunates are not only useful when living, but
-frequently _die for the good of mankind_. Some have their throats
-cut, to prove the efficacy of a styptic; others are bled to death for
-a philosophical transfusion; and very many resign their breath in the
-receiver of an air-pump. _Unhappy Dogs!_
-
-[27] "It appears to have been a part of that curse which the
-disobedience of the first man brought upon his posterity, that we
-were compelled to stain our hands in blood, and to subsist on the
-destruction of other animals. But surely, if the necessity of our
-nature obliges us to deprive an innocent being of life, it ought to
-be done in the easiest and speediest manner! and such was the custom
-among the peculiar people of God. What shall we say to that luxury
-which, for a momentary gratification of appetite, condemns a creature
-endued with feeling, perhaps with mind, to languish in torments, and
-expire by a protracted and cruel death?"--_Sermons by George Gregory,
-D.D., F.A.S._, 2d edit. p. 100.
-
-[28] How much are we the creatures of habit! Those who would shudder
-at tying a lobster to a wooden spit, and roasting it alive, will
-_coolly_ place a dozen oysters between the bars of a slow fire; and
-yet these oysters, notwithstanding their supposed torpor, may have an
-equal degree of feeling with their armoured brother.
-
-[29] I remember once seeing a practical lesson of humanity given to
-a little chimney-sweeper, which had, I dare say, a better effect
-than a volume of ethics. The young soot merchant was seated upon
-an alehouse bench, and had in one hand his brush, and in the other
-a hot buttered roll. While exercising his white masticators with a
-perseverance that evinced the highest gratification, he observed a
-dog lying on the ground near him. The repetition of "Poor fellow,
-poor fellow," in a good-natured tone, brought the quadruped from
-his resting-place: he wagged his tail, looked up with an eye of
-humble entreaty, and in that universal language which all nations
-understand, asked for a morsel of bread. The sooty tyrant held his
-remnant of roll towards him; but on the dog gently offering to take
-it, struck him with his brush so violent a blow across the nose as
-nearly broke the bone. A gentleman who, unperceived, had been a
-witness to the whole transaction, put a sixpence between his finger
-and thumb, and beckoned this little monarch of May-day to an opposite
-door. The lad grinned at the silver, but on stretching out his hand
-to receive it, the practical teacher of humanity gave him such a rap
-upon the knuckles with a cane as made them ring. His hand tingling
-with pain, and tears running down his cheeks, he asked "What that was
-for?" "To make you feel," was the reply. "How do you like a blow and
-a disappointment?--the dog endured both! Had you given him a piece
-of bread, this sixpence should have been the reward; you gave him a
-blow, I will therefore put the money in my pocket."
-
-[30] By a strange and inapplicable mistake, this has sometimes been
-written Thieves Inn. It was at that time the longest shilling fare
-from the great fountain of law in Westminster.
-
-[31] Though contrary to an express Act of Parliament, this is done
-every day.
-
-[32] To the dishonour of our police, the savage custom of driving
-cattle through the streets, even at high noon, is still continued,
-though scarce a week passes without a consequent accident. Might not
-the Fleet Market be removed to Smithfield, and that for live cattle
-be held in the skirts of the city, with a penalty upon any person
-driving a beast through the streets after nine in the morning? This
-may be impracticable; but the number of accidents which happen from
-the present custom show the necessity of some reform.
-
-[33] Instead of Amphitheatres, these Gymnasia are now more elegantly
-called Academies.
-
-[34] The scene has been said to be laid in Pancras Churchyard: I
-think it bears more resemblance to that of Marybone. The building in
-the background may be on the same eminence where now is the Jew's
-Harp House. This is only conjecture, and as such let it be received.
-
-[35] Shakspeare saw this in its true light:
-
- "_Hamlet._ Has this fellow any feeling of his business?
-
- "_Horatio._ Custom hath made it in him a matter of easiness.
-
- "_Hamlet._ Tis e'en so: the hand of little employment hath the
- daintier sense."
-
-[36] The president much resembles old Frieake, who was the master of
-Nourse, to whom the late Mr. Potts was a pupil.
-
-Mr. Frieake was originally a member of the Barbers' Company, and
-lived in Salisbury Square. Being desirous of building a carriage
-on the most reasonable terms, he employed a number of journeymen
-coachmakers in his own garret. They performed their task, but found
-it was not possible to get this appendage to modern practice into the
-street by any other means than unroofing the house. This was done,
-and a bricklayer's bill for re-covering the attic storey rendered his
-_saving_ scheme much more expensive than it would have been if he had
-employed the king's coachmaker.
-
-[37] The importance of the brewery to the revenue will appear by the
-following statement:--
-
-MALT AND BREWERS.
-
-The duty on malt from July 5, 1785, to the same day 1786, produced
-a million and a half of money, from a liquor which invigorates the
-bodies of its willing subjects to defend the blessings they enjoy,
-while that from Stygian gin enervates and incapacitates.
-
-One of the brewers (or Chevaliers de Malte, as an impertinent
-Frenchman styled Humphrey Parsons, when the King of France inquired
-who he was) within one year contributed fifty thousand pounds to
-his own share. The sight of a great London brewery exhibits a
-magnificence unspeakable. The vessels evince the extent of the trade.
-Mr. Meux of Liquorpond Street can show twenty-four vessels containing
-thirty-five thousand four hundred barrels of wholesome liquor,
-which enables our London porter-drinkers to perform tasks that ten
-gin-drinkers would sink under.
-
-[38] This gentleman has been very properly baptized the _Herring
-Poet_.
-
-[39] It is directed to the Trunkmaker, and contains five enormous
-folios, titled as follows:--_Lauder on Milton_. _Politics_, vol.
-999. _Modern Tragedies_, vol. 12. _Hill on the Royal Society_, and
-_Turnbull on Ancient Paintings_. The two last are worthy of a better
-fate, for one has some wit, and the other many sensible remarks.
-
-[40] It is not 400 years since a Baron of this realm was tried for
-high crimes and misdemeanours, and one of the chief accusations
-exhibited against him was, that he suffered himself to be carried
-about his garden by two of his own species.
-
-[41] It is said, I don't know upon what authority, to be intended as
-a burlesque delineation of John Stephen Liotard, of whom Mr. Walpole
-thus writes in p. 195 of his _Anecdotes_:--
-
-"Devoid of imagination, and one would think of memory, he could
-render nothing but what he saw before his eyes. Freckles, marks of
-the small-pox, everything found its place; not so much from fidelity,
-as because he could not conceive the absence of anything that
-appeared to him."
-
-This miserable personage may, however, be only intended to show the
-state of the arts at that time, when an English painter, if not
-excellent in portraits, had no other patronage than that of those
-gentlemen who put out signs of Blue Lions, Green Dragons, and Red
-Harts. Thanks to the talents of our immortal bard, it is not so now.
-Whether the artists of the present day drain copious draughts of
-humble porter, or fill their flagons with Falernian or French wines,
-let not the memory of their patron poet be forgotten. "He merits all
-their wonder, all their praise!"
-
-[42] This wretched being was painted from nature. His cry was, "Buy
-my ballads, and I'll give you a glass of gin for nothing."
-
-[43] This _infernal broth_ is vulgarly called "Strip-me-naked," and
-has almost invariably that effect.
-
-[44] This is an unnatural and violent exaggeration.
-
-[45] The church in view is _St. George's, Bloomsbury_. Ralph, in his
-_Critical Review of the Buildings in London_, properly observes that
-"this structure is ridiculous and absurd even to a proverb. That the
-builder mistook whim for genius, and ornament for taste, and that
-the execrable conceit of displaying a statue of the king on the top
-of it excites laughter in the ignorant, and contempt in the judge of
-architecture."
-
-[46] Two of these harpies have names highly descriptive of their
-professions--"Gripe" and "Killman."
-
-[47] I hope I shall not be censured for inserting a quotation from
-Fingal as the motto to an imitation of Rembrandt. Both poet and
-painter delighted in darkness, and each of them sometimes introduced
-a sublime and majestic figure, which beamed through the gloom "like
-the new moon seen through a gathered mist, when the sky pours down
-its flaky snow, and the world is silent and dark."
-
-[48] This little winged periwinkle is engraven in a very different
-style from the rest of the plate, much of which is a sort of _aquæ_
-tint. Many impressions were taken off without this figure.
-
-[49] On the blade is engraven a dagger, the arms of our metropolis.
-
-[50] This has been generally thought intended for a portrait of
-Hume Campbell, who, like some of his boisterous brethren of the
-present day, distinguished himself by a sort of savage elocution more
-consonant to Billingsgate than a court of law. Others have said it
-was designed for Doctor William King, Principal of St. Mary Hall,
-Oxford, and in proof of their assertion refer to an ascertained
-portrait in Worlidge's view of "Lord Westmoreland's Installation,"
-1761, to which it has a striking resemblance.
-
-[51] On the scraps are inscribed, "We have found this man a pestilent
-fellow, a mover of sedition among the Jews, ringleader of the sect,"
-etc. etc. etc.
-
-[52] While the plate remained in the hands of Mrs. Hogarth
-impressions were sold at that price, but were afterwards reduced to
-three shillings.
-
-[53] With each infant was then sent some little memorial by which it
-might be known at a future day. The following lines were written by
-an unfortunate widow, and pinned to the breast of a child who was
-received into the hospital:
-
- "Go, gentle babe, thy future life be spent
- In virtuous purity and calm content;
- Life's sunshine bless thee, and no anxious care
- Sit on thy brow, and draw the falling tear;
- Thy country's grateful servant may'st thou prove,
- And all thy life be happiness and love."
-
-Some fifteen or sixteen years ago, a person of respectable appearance
-went to the hospital, and requested to see the chapel, great room,
-etc. He then desired to speak with the treasurer, to whom he
-presented a ten-pound bank note, expressing a wish that it might be
-recorded as a small but grateful memorial from the first orphan who
-was apprenticed by the charity. He added, "I was that orphan, and in
-consequence of the education I here received, have had the power of
-acquiring an independence with integrity and honour."
-
-[54] Several other pictures were presented to the hospital by the few
-eminent painters who then lived in London.
-
-"The donations in painting which several artists presented to the
-Foundling Hospital were among the first objects of this nature which
-engaged the public attention. The artists observing the effects that
-these paintings produced, came, in the year 1760, to a resolution
-to try the fate of a public exhibition of their works. This effort
-had its desired effect. The public were entertained, and the artists
-were excited to emulation."--_Strange's Inquiry into the Rise and
-Establishment of the Royal Academy_, p. 63.
-
-This gives Hogarth a right to be classed, if not among those who were
-founders of the Royal Academy, as one of the first causes of its
-establishment.
-
-[55] Be this as it may, certain it is that the boy, who was
-afterwards so great a Jewish legislator, bears a very strong
-resemblance to the Egyptian princess. That the artist meant by this
-family likeness to hint that he was of royal descent, I do not
-presume to assert.
-
-[56] The head is said to be copied from a youth of the name of
-Seaton. The attitude and general air very much resemble that of
-Delilah, in a picture painted by Vandyke, of Samson seized by the
-Philistines, now in the Emperor's gallery at Vienna.
-
-[57] These prints were promised to the subscribers sooner than they
-could be completed; and in consequence of their being delayed, the
-following advertisement was inserted in the _Public Advertiser_ of
-February 28, 1757:--
-
- "Mr. Hogarth is obliged to inform the subscribers to his Election
- prints that the three last cannot be published till about
- Christmas next, which delay is entirely owing to the difficulties
- he has met with to procure able hands to engrave the plates: but
- that he neither may have any more apologies to make on such an
- account, nor trespass any further on the indulgence of the public
- by increasing a collection already sufficiently large, he intends
- to employ the rest of his time in portrait-painting; chiefly this
- notice seems more necessary, as several spurious and scandalous
- prints have lately been published in his name," etc.
-
-This fretful appeal must have been written under the influence of
-momentary spleen, which might possibly originate in his coadjutor's
-disappointing, and by that means forcing him to violate his
-engagements with the public. There is no other apology for his
-indulging a thought of quitting that walk in which he indisputably
-led, for another in which he must not only follow, but be far behind
-some of his contemporaries.
-
-[58] Sir George Saville saw this in its true light. One of the
-supporters of the Bill of Rights being desirous of introducing Sir
-George's name among the members of the society, made application to
-the worthy Baronet for his permission to propose him. Sir George
-declined the honour, and pleaded his engagements being so numerous
-that he had not time to attend, etc. etc. "We do not expect your
-attendance," replied his friend; "we do not expect your constant
-attendance; but the sanction of your name would be a tower of
-strength to the society; and as you see by the public prints, the
-manner we conduct ourselves, and the business we do, you must
-approve, I think you cannot refuse us your name." "I do not," said
-Sir George, "make any objection to your conduct, which I have thought
-very regular and systematic, but I really dislike the title you have
-adopted; I observe that you meet, read a string of observations, and
-then make a motion for adjourning to dinner in the next room; there
-each man drinks his two bottles to most patriotic and constitutional
-toasts. In the next paper appear advertisements, that on the
-following Monday the supporters of the Bill of Rights will meet
-again. Dinner on table precisely at four o'clock. You dine, and
-drink your wine; your secretary gives us the same information in the
-succeeding prints, and again adds, that--dinner will be on the table
-precisely at four o'clock. All these circumstances induce me to think
-you should alter your title; instead of 'Supporters of the Bill of
-Rights,' call yourselves what you really are, 'Supporters of the Bill
-of Fare!'"
-
-[59] This has been pronounced, I know not upon what authority, to be
-intended for the late Thomas Potter, Esq.
-
-[60] In page 21 of a quarto pamphlet published in 1755, and entitled,
-"The Last Blow, or an unanswerable vindication of the society of
-Exeter College, being a reply to the Vice-Chancellor, Dr. King,
-and the writers of the _London Evening Post_," is the following
-paragraph:--
-
- "The next character to whose merits we would do justice is the
- Rev. Dr. C--ss--t (Cosserat). But as it is very difficult to
- delineate this fellow in colours sufficiently strong and lively,
- it is fortunate for us and the Doctor that Hogarth has undertaken
- the task. In the print of 'An Election Entertainment,' the public
- will see the Doctor represented sitting among the freeholders,
- and zealously eating and drinking for the sake of the new
- interest. His venerable and humane aspect will at once bespeak
- the dignity and benevolence of his heart. Never did aldermen at
- Guildhall devour custard with half such an appearance of love to
- his country, or swallow ale with so much the air of a patriot.
- These circumstances the pencil of Hogarth will undoubtedly make
- manifest; but it is much to be lamented that his words also
- cannot appear in this print, and that the artist cannot delineate
- that persuasive flow of eloquence which could prevail upon
- copyholders to abjure their base tenures and swear themselves
- freeholders. But this oratory (far different from the balderdash
- of Tully and Doctor King, concerning liberty and our country),
- as the genius of mild ale alone could inspire, this fellow alone
- could deliver."
-
-
-[61] I think it is recorded in Mr. Joseph Miller's _Reports_, that
-our British Solomon often asserted that scratching was too great a
-luxury for a subject to enjoy.
-
-[62] This woman was remarkable for performing at fairs, country
-hops, etc. in the neighbourhood of Oxford, and known by the name of
-Fiddling Nan.
-
-[63] This is a portrait of the present Sir John Parnell, nephew to
-the poet. He was introduced into this print by his own request,
-declaring at the same time that, from his being so generally known in
-Ireland, his face would help the sale of the engraving.
-
-[64] It is supposed to be the portrait of an Oxford bruiser who went
-by the name of Teague Carter.
-
-[65] A mashing-tub seems a sufficiently capacious vessel, but sinks
-to nothing when compared with a bowl which, it is recorded, was
-filled with punch on the 15th of October 1694, at the expense of
-Admiral Russel. The Admiral's punch was made in a fountain situated
-in the centre of a large garden, the terminus to four long gravel
-walks, canopied with orange and lemon trees. In each walk was a table
-the length of the avenue, covered with a cold collation, consisting
-of every luxury which the season produced; and in the basin of
-the fountain, which the gallant seaman chose to call a little
-basin, for the entertainment of a few friends, were the following
-ingredients:--Four hogsheads of brandy, eight hogsheads of water,
-twenty-five thousand lemons, twenty gallons of lime juice, thirteen
-hundredweight of fine Lisbon sugar, five pounds of grated nutmegs,
-three hundred toasted biscuits, and lastly, a pipe of dry mountain
-Malaga. Over the fountain was erected a large canopy to keep off the
-rain, and in a little boat, built for the purpose, a boy belonging to
-the fleet rowed round the basin, and served this cordial beverage to
-the company. More than six thousand men partook of this mighty bowl.
-
-[66] This alludes to the alteration of the style in the year 1752, a
-measure which gave great umbrage, and excited a violent clamour among
-the advocates for old customs and adherents to ancient forms.
-
-[67] Kirton was a tobacconist in Fleet Street, but injured his
-circumstances and destroyed his constitution by his active zeal in
-the Oxfordshire election of 1754.
-
-[68] This is said to be intended for the late Duke of Newcastle,
-his Grace having exerted all his influence in support of the
-Naturalization Bill: the nose of the effigy gives some probability to
-the conjecture.
-
-[69] Under the portrait of a Mr. Cholmondeley of Vale Royal, in
-Cheshire, engraved about the same time with these prints, are the
-following quaint lines:
-
- "In this plain garb a senator is shown,
- Who never bought a vote, nor sold his own."
-
-
-[70] This print undoubtedly gave the hint for a transaction in which
-Punch was made the principal agent at a late Shaftesbury election.
-
-[71] By the condescending humility of men of high rank, and the
-aspiring ambition of men of no rank, they to all appearance become
-equal at every general election. The following is one among the few
-instances of an independent spirit in a candidate's address:--
-
- "TO THE GENTLEMEN, CLERGY, AND FREEHOLDERS OF THE COUNTY OF YORK.
-
- "GENTLEMEN,--I have had the honour to represent the county of
- York in three successive Parliaments: I have been diligent in my
- attendance, and have performed my duty with a clear and unbiassed
- conscience. I have now an opposition declared against me, for
- what reasons I do not know, except that I am not disposed to obey
- the dictates of the associators at York. I do not wish to serve
- you upon such terms. I will never go to Parliament in fetters;
- nor did I, nor ever will I disguise my principles, which all go
- to the support of our excellent constitution in Church and State.
- I avow myself an enemy to tumults, sedition, and rebellion, and
- will never support any but a British interest. Consistently with
- that, I am a friend to the people, and am determined to preserve
- my independency, yielding neither to any influence of ministers,
- nor to any clamours of a faction.
-
- "Upon these principles I shall esteem it a high honour to be
- returned for this great county, and shall be thankful for your
- support.--I am, gentlemen, etc.,
-
- "EDWIN LASCELLES.
-
- "_September 12, 1780._"
-
-In Mr. Edmund Burke's speech to the electors of Bristol, on the 3d
-of November 1774, he gave such cogent reasons for not signing any
-engagement to obey in all cases the instructions of his constituents,
-that I cannot resist the temptation of inserting an extract, for the
-contemplation of those who are advocates of a contrary system:--
-
-"Certainly, gentlemen, it ought to be the happiness and glory
-of a representative to live in the strictest union, the closest
-correspondence, and the most unreserved communication with his
-constituents. Their wishes ought to have great weight with him; their
-opinion high respect; their business unremitted attention. It is
-his duty to sacrifice his repose, his pleasures, his satisfaction
-to theirs; and above all, ever and in all cases to prefer their
-interest to his own. But his unbiassed opinion, his mature judgment,
-his enlightened conscience, he ought not to sacrifice to you, to any
-men, or to any set of men living. These he does not derive from your
-pleasure; no, nor from the law and the constitution. They are a trust
-from Providence, for the abuse of which he is deeply answerable. Your
-representative owes you not only his industry, but his judgment;
-and he betrays instead of serving you, if he sacrifices it to your
-opinion.
-
-"My worthy colleague says his will ought to be subservient to
-yours. If that be all, the thing is innocent. If government were a
-matter of will upon any side, yours, without question, ought to be
-superior. But government and legislation are matters of reason and
-judgment, and not of inclination; and what sort of reason is that in
-which the determination precedes the discussion, in which one set
-of men deliberate and another decide, and where those who form the
-conclusion are three hundred miles distant from those who hear the
-argument?
-
-"To deliver an opinion is the right of all men; that of constituents
-is a weighty and respectable opinion, which a representative ought
-always to rejoice to hear, and which he ought always most seriously
-to consider. But authoritative instructions; mandates issued, which
-the member is bound blindly and implicitly to obey, to vote, and to
-argue for, though contrary to the clearest conviction of his judgment
-and conscience; these are things utterly unknown to the laws of the
-land, which arise from a fundamental mistake of the whole order and
-tenor of our constitution.
-
-"Parliament is not a congress of ambassadors from different and
-hostile interests; which interests each must maintain, as an agent
-and advocate against other agents and advocates; but Parliament is a
-deliberative assembly of one nation, with one interest, that of the
-whole; where not local purposes, not local prejudices ought to guide,
-but the general good resulting from the general reason of the whole.
-You choose a member, indeed; but when you have chosen him, he is not
-a member of Bristol, but he is a member of Parliament. If the local
-constituent should have an interest, or should form an hasty opinion,
-evidently opposite to the real good of the rest of the community,
-the member of that place ought to be as far as any other from any
-endeavour to give it effect."
-
-[72] In the year 1739 Admiral Vernon took Portobello with six ships
-only. The public gratitude to him was boundless: he was sung in
-ballads; at the ensuing general election in 1741 he was returned for
-three different corporations; but above all, his portrait covered
-every signpost; and he may be, figuratively, said to have sold the
-ale, beer, and purl of all England for six years.
-
-[73] This sign has a very whimsical appearance: it represents our
-merry monarch in a great tree, enveloped in a black wig, decorated
-with a point lace cravat, and environed with three crowns. Two
-Parliamentary troopers, riding beneath the branches, do not perceive
-that this faithless "Defender of the Faith," and so forth, is
-immediately above them. This curious delineation is evidently copied
-from some country sign, and gives a very exact representation of
-one I remember to have seen in a village in Shropshire, with the
-following _poetical_ inscription:--
-
- "This oak, the glory of the wood, may well be called a royal thing,
- For once upon its branches there perched a great king;
- And while the king was perched upon the branches so high,
- The Roundhead rebels under him they all passed by."
-
-
-[74] When Ware the architect was told of this piece of satire, he
-said the artist must be a very foolish fellow; for if he had painted
-the coachman as a shorter man, or made him stoop, he might have
-driven through the gateway with his head upon his shoulders.
-
-[75] John Shoreditch, in the reign of Edward III., sued the county of
-Middlesex (for which he was returned to Parliament) to recover his
-wages. In some letters from the dead to the living, published about
-the year 1761, one signed with his name concludes as follows:
-
- "If I was now upon earth--either nobleman or commoner--I should
- choose peace and quiet, both public and private: I should be
- happy in preserving religion and morality among my countrymen,
- instead of suborning them to take the oath falsely about bribery
- and corruption; debauching their minds, by giving them money that
- is of no use to their families, and keeping them in continual
- drunkenness, that renders them incapable of serving themselves or
- their country.
-
- "To this I attribute the loss of that which was common in my
- time, but in yours is found only in romances and novels--I mean
- simplicity of manners among the country people. Rustic innocence
- was then as common among the men as among the women; but there
- is scarce any mode of vice or folly which is not at this period
- equally known and practised by both sexes; and in the most
- obscure villages to as great a degree as in the most polished
- cities. Let us consider that a million of money was spent in
- treats and bribery at the last general election; and if we take
- into the calculation the contested elections, for some of which
- there were three or four candidates, and the money that is spent
- by their friends on these occasions, we shall not find the
- computation too high. What place, then, will not the influence
- of this immense sum extend to? Not even the smallest hamlet can
- escape; and you may as well look for purity of manners, innocence
- and simplicity, among the Capuans of old, or in your Covent
- Garden, as in any place that an election guinea has found its way
- to.--I am, etc."
-
-
-[76] I am tasteless enough to prefer this to Garrick between Tragedy
-and Comedy. From Hogarth the hint was indisputably taken; but
-exquisite as is the face of Thalia, the countenance of the actor,
-from the contention of two passions, has assumed a kind of idiotic
-stare, of which our honest farmer has not an iota. In the true spirit
-of Falstaff, he says, or seems to say, "D'ye think I do not know ye?
-Ha! ha! ha! he! he! he!!"
-
-[77] Swift boasted that he made it a rule never to give his voice
-for the appointment of any man to any situation for which that man
-was not better qualified than his opponent. Being once applied to
-for his interest in the recommendation of a curate, because he was
-a very good sort of man, though a very vile preacher, he said he
-would willingly, if in his power, recommend him to be a bishop,
-because that was a business in which preaching was not wanted, but
-in a curate it was wanted every week. Being once asked by one of his
-parishioners which of two candidates he would advise him to vote for
-as a Parliament man, in a warmly contested Irish election, Swift
-desired he would first consider what was the business of a Parliament
-man; and secondly, which of the parties was best qualified for that
-business; and then he would want no advice. If your vote, added he,
-could make a lord or a duke, as they are people who need not do any
-business at all, you might toss up a halfpenny, and vote for the man
-who came up heads.
-
-[78] By a letter we see out of his pocket, this appears to be Doctor
-Shebbeare, who was put on the pillory, and confined in prison;
-not for writing in the cause of his country, but for printing and
-publishing the sixth letter to the people of England, in which
-he most impudently and audaciously abuses George the First and
-the present royal family. The Doctor frequently said in a public
-coffeehouse, that he would have a pillory or a pension. In each of
-these points he was gratified; Lord Mansfield complimented him with
-the first, and Lord Bute rewarded him with the second. The honour he
-enjoyed long ago, the emolument he died in the receipt of a very few
-years since.
-
-[79] The late Doctor Barrowby persuaded a dying man, that being much
-better he might venture with him in his chariot to the hustings in
-Covent Garden, to poll for Sir George Vandeput. The unhappy voter
-took his physician's advice, and in less than an hour after his
-return--expired.
-
-[80] This sagacious-looking gentleman is said to be intended as a
-portraiture of the late Bub Doddington, afterwards Lord Melcombe.
-
-[81] It has been thought that this carries some allusion to a
-circumstance which happened at the contested Oxfordshire election
-in 1754, when an outrageous mob, in the old interest, surrounded a
-post-chaise and attempted to throw it into the river; but Captain
-T----, who was in the carriage, shot a chimney-sweeper that was a
-ringleader in the assault, and his followers dispersed.
-
-[82] About the year 1740, when party disputes ran very high, a
-gentleman of superior talents and undeviating integrity offered
-himself as a candidate for a town in the West of England. The first
-person whose vote he solicited asked him if he was a Whig or a Tory?
-"Neither," was the reply; "I profess myself a moderate man, and when
-administration act right, will vote with them,--when wrong, against
-them." "And be these really thy principles!" said the elector; "be
-these really thy principles! Then thou shalt not have my vote; but
-I'll give thee a piece of advice. Thou seest my door; it leads into
-the street, the right-hand side of which is for the Tories, the left
-for the Whigs; and for a cold-blooded moderate man like thee, there
-is the kennel, and in it I advise thee to walk, for thee be'st not
-decided enough for any other situation."
-
-[83] This must indisputably be considered as the lawyer's mansion,
-not merely because it has a better appearance than any house we have
-seen in the foregoing prints, but because a parchment label, which
-hangs out of an upper window where a clerk is writing, is inscribed
-"Indintur." Had the artist thought it worth while to have consulted
-Master Henry Dilworth, or any other eminent schoolmaster, this
-orthography had been corrected.
-
-[84] When many of those gentleman who had been very active in the
-Revolution, and materially contributed to the success of our great
-deliverer, applied to a nobleman high in office for the first places
-in the State, he answered their requests by referring them to the
-Roman history: "There," says he, "you will find that geese twice
-saved the Capitol; but I never heard that those geese were made
-Consuls."
-
-[85] "Vermin" is a coarse phrase, but I think in a degree
-appropriate. How similar are the effects attendant on a swarm of
-pettifogging lawyers settling in a country town, to those resulting
-from a swarm of noxious and destructive insects settling in a garden!
-
-[86] A nobleman, whose name it is not necessary to record, was so
-struck with the wit of this motto, that he had it inscribed upon a
-common eight-day clock.
-
-[87] The life of Andrew Marvel forms a fine contrast to the life
-of a modern patriot. He was the son of a clergyman who resided
-at Kingston-upon-Hull, in Yorkshire, at which town he was born
-in the year 1624. His first appearance in public business was as
-an assistant to John Milton, when that inspired poet was Latin
-secretary to the Protector. A little before the Restoration he was
-chosen representative for his native town, and afterwards re-elected
-for the same place, and had a seat in that Parliament which began
-at Westminster, May 8, 1661. In this station he discharged his
-trust with the utmost fidelity, and always displayed a particular
-regard for those by whom he was elected; for he regularly sent the
-particulars of every proceeding in the House to the heads of the town
-which he represented, and to these accounts always joined his own
-opinion. This gained so much upon their affections, that they allowed
-him an honourable pension during the whole time he sat in Parliament,
-which was until his death. By his actions and writings he rendered
-himself obnoxious to the ruling powers; notwithstanding which,
-Charles the Second much delighted in his company. Having one evening
-passed some hours with this good-humoured monarch, his Majesty next
-morning sent Lord Treasurer Danby to find out his lodgings. Mr.
-Marvel's apartments were up two pair of stairs, in a little court
-in the Strand, where he was writing when the Lord Treasurer rather
-abruptly opened the door. Surprised at so unexpected a visitor, Mr.
-Marvel told his Lordship he believed he had mistaken his way. Lord
-Danby replied, "Not, now I have found Mr. Marvel;" adding, "I come
-with a message from his Majesty, who wishes to know what he can do to
-serve you." "I know," replied Marvel, "the nature of courts too well
-to lay myself under the obligation; for whoever is distinguished by
-a prince's favours, is certainly expected to vote in his interest."
-Lord Danby told him that his Majesty was sensible of his merits, and
-on that account alone desired to know if there were any place at
-Court which he would be pleased with. These offers, though urged with
-the greatest earnestness, had no effect. He told the nobleman, that
-to accept them with honour was impossible; because, added he, "I must
-either be ungrateful to the King in voting against him, or false to
-my country in giving in to the measures of the Court. The only favour
-therefore which I beg of his Majesty is, that he will esteem me to be
-as dutiful a subject as any he has; and more in his proper interest
-by refusing these offers than if I had accepted them." The Lord
-Danby, finding that no argument would prevail, told him that the King
-had ordered him a thousand pounds, which he requested him to receive
-as a token of royal favour. This last offer was rejected with the
-same stedfastness as the first, though, soon after the Lord Treasurer
-was gone, he was under the necessity of sending to a friend to borrow
-a guinea. The greatest temptations of riches or honours could never
-bribe him to depart from what he thought the interest of his country,
-neither could the most imminent dangers deter him from pursuing it.
-
-He died, not without strong suspicions of being poisoned, August the
-16th, 1678, in the fifty-eighth year of his age, and was interred in
-the Church of St. Giles' in the Fields. Highly to the honour of the
-inhabitants of Kingston-upon-Hull, they in the year 1683 contributed
-a sum of money for a monument to the memory of this best of men and
-most incorruptible of senators; but the then minister of St. Giles'
-forbade its being erected in that church, on account of the following
-epitaph which was inscribed on it:--
-
-"Near this place lieth the body of Andrew Marvel, Esq., a man so
-endowed by nature, so improved by education, study, and travel;
-so consummated by experience and learning, that joining the most
-peculiar graces of wit with a singular penetration and strength
-of judgment, and exercising all these in the whole course of his
-life with unalterable steadiness in the ways of virtue, he became
-the ornament and example of his age; beloved by good men, feared
-by bad, admired by all, though imitated, alas, by few, and scarce
-paralleled by any. But a tombstone can neither contain his character,
-nor is marble necessary to transmit it to posterity; it is engraved
-in the minds of this generation, and will be always legible in his
-inimitable writings. Nevertheless, he having served near twenty years
-successively in Parliament, and that with such wisdom, dexterity,
-integrity, and courage as became a true patriot, the town of
-Kingston-upon-Hull, from whence he was constantly returned to that
-assembly, lamenting in his death the public loss, have erected this
-monument of their grief and gratitude.
-
- "Heu fragile humanum genus! Heu terrestria vana!
- Heu quem spectatum continet urna virum!"
-
-In Mr. Mason's animated _Ode to Independency_, the dignified virtue
-of this truly patriotic character is described
-
- "In thoughts that breathe, and words that burn."
-
-
-[88] "Such were the words of the bards in the days of song, when the
-king heard the music of harps, and the tales of other times."--_Songs
-of Selma_, p. 302.
-
-[89] In the early impressions it is spelt _Prusia_. It has been said
-with great confidence, that after twenty-five were worked off, this
-error in orthography was discovered and amended. I have seen at least
-fifty, and think it probable that all which were subscribed for were
-delivered before any alteration was made in the spelling.
-
-[90] This word is explained in the _Slang Dictionary_ as a cant
-expression for the threat of a blow.
-
-[91] The fifer is designed for the portrait of a young lad who was
-much noticed by the late William Duke of Cumberland; and who, from
-the propriety of his conduct, was first rewarded with a halberd, and
-afterwards promoted to a pair of colours.
-
-[92] This is said to be the portrait of a fellow known by the name
-of Jockey James, a most frequent attendant on the nursery for
-bruising, under the management of the mighty Broughton. Jockey had
-a son who rendered himself eminent by boxing with Smallwood, and
-many other athletic pugilists. The French pieman, grenadier, and
-chimney-sweeper, are also taken from the life, and said, by those
-who recollect their persons, to be very faithful resemblances of the
-persons intended.
-
-[93] This gentleman displays the great difference between _an_
-officer, and _a officer_: he comes under the latter description.
-
-[94] This is Mr. Thornton's remark, and rather too severe. Lord North
-once declared in the House of Commons that he saw no harm in the
-officers of the Guards. "They have nothing to do," added he, "but
-walk in the park, kiss the nursery-maids, and drink the children's
-milk."
-
-[95] This figure is introduced in the very curious print of
-"Enthusiasm Delineated," and in the eleventh print of "Industry and
-Idleness," and was designed as a portrait of Mother Douglass of the
-Piazza.
-
-[96] Lavater's character of this people is not exactly similar to
-Hogarth's delineation; it is, however, curious: "The form of a
-Frenchman is different from that of all other nations, and difficult
-to describe in words. No other man has so little of the firm or
-deep traits, or so much motion. He is all appearance, all gesture;
-therefore the first impression seldom deceives, but declares who and
-what he is. His imagination is incapable of high flights; and the
-sublime in all arts is to him offence. Hence his dislike of whatever
-is antique in art or literature, his deafness to true music, his
-blindness to the highest beauties of painting. His last most striking
-trait is, that he is astonished at everything, and cannot imagine how
-it is possible men should be any other than they are at Paris."
-
-[97] Among the number of ingenious allusions which the seekers of
-Hogarth's meanings have pointed out, I have never heard it remarked
-that the standard waves immediately over this under-sized hero, who
-is consequently _under the standard_!
-
-[98] Let not the reader imagine that this quotation alludes to
-the Duke's ponderous equestrian statue in Cavendish Square. That
-glittering monument of burnished brass bears no very striking
-resemblance to either an angel or a fiery Pegasus. It must, however,
-be considered as a monument of the taste, vanity, and gratitude of
-Colonel Salter.
-
-[99] Grotesque delineations have more influence upon the populace
-than the philosopher is apt to imagine. Sir Robert Walpole inspected
-every political print and political ballad that was published,
-and said that from these vulgar effusions he could form a certain
-judgment of the genuine spirit and local prejudices which actuated
-the multitude.
-
-[100] Election is, I believe, in its general sense, the act of
-choosing. We see by the application of the word in this book, it was
-not then confined to choosing a member of Parliament, but applied
-indiscriminately to either bird or beast.
-
-[101] This is mere conjecture; but from Jackson the humpbacked
-jockey, and some other sedate personages who were present, I think it
-is more likely to be designed for that place than any other.
-
-[102] A man of rank with these plebeian propensities might in the
-year 1759 be considered as a phenomenon: in this age of elegant
-accomplishment and universal refinement, the thing is common. We
-now see men of family and fortune ambitious of becoming umpires in
-battles between Big Ben and the Ruffian!
-
-[103] The "March to Finchley."
-
-[104] When Garrick first came on the stage, and one very sultry
-evening in the month of May performed the character of Lear, he in
-the first four acts received the customary tribute of applause. At
-the conclusion of the fifth, when he wept over the body of Cordelia,
-every eye caught the soft infection--the big round tear ran down
-every cheek. At this interesting moment, to the astonishment of
-all present, his face assumed a new character, and his whole frame
-appeared agitated by a new passion: it was not tragic, for he was
-evidently endeavouring to suppress a laugh. In a few seconds the
-attendant nobles appeared to be affected in the same manner; and
-the beauteous Cordelia, who was reclined upon a crimson couch,
-opening her eyes to see what occasioned the interruption, leapt
-from her sofa, and with the majesty of England, the gallant Albany,
-and tough old Kent, ran laughing off the stage. The audience could
-not account for this strange termination of a tragedy in any other
-way than by supposing the _dramatis personæ_ were seized with a
-sudden frenzy; but their risibility had a different source. A fat
-Whitechapel butcher, seated on the centre of the front bench in the
-pit, was accompanied by his mastiff, who being accustomed to sit on
-the same seat with his master at home, naturally thought he might
-enjoy the like privilege here. The butcher sat very back, and the
-quadruped finding a fair opening, got upon the bench, and fixing his
-fore-paws on the rail of the orchestra, peered at the performers
-with as upright a head and as grave an air as the most sagacious
-critic of his day. Our corpulent slaughter-man was made of melting
-stuff, and not being accustomed to a playhouse heat, found himself
-much oppressed by the weight of a large and well-powdered Sunday
-peruke, which, for the gratification of cooling and wiping his head,
-he pulled off, and placed on the head of his mastiff. The dog being
-in so conspicuous, so obtrusive a situation, caught the eye of Mr.
-Garrick and the other performers. A mastiff in a churchwarden's
-wig (for the butcher was a parish officer) was too much: it would
-have provoked laughter in Lear himself, at the moment he was most
-distressed; no wonder, then, that it had such an effect on his
-representative.
-
-[105] In the second canto of a poem entitled _The Gamblers_, are the
-following notes:--
-
-"By the cockpit laws, the man who cannot or who will not pay his
-debts of honour, is liable to exaltation in a basket."
-
-"Stephen's exaltation in a basket, and his there continuing to bet
-though unable to pay, is taken from a scene in one of Hogarth's
-prints, humorously setting forth that there are men whom a passion
-for gaming does not forsake, even in the very hour that they stand
-proclaimed insolvents."
-
-[106] Frequently called Deptford Nan, and sometimes dignified with a
-title--Duchess of Deptford! She was a famous cock-feeder, well known
-at Newmarket, and did the honours of the gentlemen's ordinary at
-Northampton, while a bachelor presided at the table appropriated to
-the ladies.
-
-[107] A small print published in the year 1732, of which there are
-three copies.
-
-[108] I have inserted the name of Gay on the authority of Mr.
-Nichols' _Anecdotes_, in page 177 of which is the following remark
-from a correspondent:--
-
-"That Pope was silent on the merits of Hogarth (as one of your
-readers has observed) should excite little astonishment, as our
-artist's print on the South Sea exhibits the translator of Homer in
-no very flattering point of view. He is represented with one of his
-hands in the pocket of a fat personage, who wears a horn-book at his
-girdle. For whom this figure was designed is doubtful; perhaps it was
-meant for Gay, who was a fat man, and a loser in the scheme, etc.
-The horn-book he wears at his girdle perhaps refers to the fables he
-wrote for the Duke of Cumberland. The conclusion to the inscription
-under this plate--'Guess at the rest, you'll find out more'--seems
-also to imply a consciousness of such personal satire as it was not
-prudent to explain."
-
-The conjecture that this is designed for Gay is fair, but I think not
-quite conclusive. Hogarth would not have represented the translator
-of Homer diving into the coat pocket of a brother bard for coin, and
-Gay could not be robbed of anything else. May not the label with
-A--B--, etc., be intended to point out Arbuthnot: he also was a fat
-man, and so careless of fame, that he suffered Pope, and some other
-eminent contemporary authors, to plunder him of the best part of his
-writings, which they afterwards modestly published as their own;
-_vide_ a very large portion of _Martinus Scriblerus_, particularly
-Pope's own edition, published in 1742.
-
-Pope is again introduced in a print published about the year 1728,
-entitled "Rich's Glory, or The Triumphant Entry into Covent Garden,"
-improperly said to be the production of Hogarth.
-
-[109] This satire is wound up with a well-turned apology for the
-folly, but even here a dart must be hurled at the Duke.--The dart
-recoils, and returns to him who threw it; for although his Grace was
-vainly ostentatious, and absurdly extravagant, he was kind-hearted
-and beneficent to a fault:--
-
- "Yet hence the poor are cloth'd, the hungry fed:
- Health to himself, and to his infants bread,
- The lab'rer bears: what his hard heart denies,
- His charitable vanity supplies.
- Another age shall see the golden ear
- Embrown the slope, and nod on the parterre;
- Deep harvests bury all his pride has plann'd,
- And laughing Ceres re-assume the land."
-
-It is a singular circumstance that the prophecy in the last four
-lines (for a prophecy it must be called) should be fulfilled, I had
-almost said in the poet's lifetime. A very few years after his death,
-when Hallet the upholsterer purchased Canons, the park was ploughed
-up and sown with corn.
-
-I have somewhere seen an epigram, written soon after the publication
-of this epistle:--
-
- "What Chandos builds let Pope no more deride,
- Because he took not Nature for his guide,
- Since, mighty Bard--in thy own form we see
- That nature may mistake, as well as he."
-
-
-[110] We have amateurs of boxing, and why not of cock-fighting?
-
-[111] This noble diversion may with more propriety be called royal
-in India than in England, for it is not peculiar to Great Britain,
-neither is it confined within the narrow boundaries of Europe. In
-a picture which Mr. Zoffani designed from nature, he has exhibited
-the Nabob of Oude, and a crowd of his courtiers, dressed in their
-robes of state surrounding a cockpit. The Asiatic Sovereign, his
-brother, and his attendants, display as much eagerness for gain, and
-rapacity of physiognomy, as is to be seen in the most notorious of
-our Newmarket gamblers.
-
-[112] Throwing at cocks on this day is, I hope and believe, a less
-prevalent custom than it once was. Our ancestors must have formed
-strange notions of the duties that were acceptable to the Deity on
-commencement of Lent, when they set apart the eve as a proper time
-for the martyrdom of this inoffensive animal.
-
-[113]
-
- "Wilt thou draw near the nature of the gods,
- Draw near them then in being merciful;
- Sweet mercy is nobility's true badge."
-
-
-[114] "A beautiful Diana, with her trussed-up robes, the crescent
-alone wanting, stands on the high altar to receive homage in the
-character of St. Agnes, in a pretty church dedicated to her (_fuor
-della Porte_), where it is supposed she suffered martyrdom: and why?
-Why, for not venerating that very goddess Diana, and for refusing to
-walk in her procession at the new moons, like a good Christian girl.
-Such contradictions put one from oneself, as Shakspeare says."--Mrs.
-Piozzi's _Letters_.
-
-[115] A catalogue of the massacres, slaughters, and assassinations
-which have taken place for little differences of opinion, would fill
-a library. Superstition has been the general cause of man destroying
-man.
-
-[116] The infatuation of the lower order of the people during the
-drawing of a lottery is hardly to be conceived. They cannot consult
-Virgil, but they consult every star in the firmament, and every male
-and female astrologer in the parish, to find out lucky numbers.
-Figures chalked on the wall, and dreams, have great credit; and much
-respect is paid to the year of their birth, a husband's or wife's
-death, etc. etc. The destructive consequences of this thirst for
-divination it is not necessary to enumerate,--they are recorded in
-the annals of Bethlehem Hospital and the Newgate Calendar.
-
-[117] A field preacher in one of the provinces, from the strength of
-his lungs and length of his extemporary harangues, being for some
-months attended by a more numerous congregation than the parson of
-the parish, began to think himself the more orthodox man. Fraught
-with this idea, he one Sunday evening went to the vestry-room, waited
-until the service concluded, and then very rudely attacked the
-clergyman, telling him he came to convince him, to confound him, and
-to convert him by the word! This was followed by the recital of a
-thousand texts from various parts of the Holy Scriptures, so combined
-as to prove whatever he wished; and concluded by, "This is all from
-the Bible, and by the Bible I desires to abide.--Answer me by the
-same book." The clergyman being a man of some humour, after hearing
-him with much patience, very coolly asked this labourer in the
-vineyard if he recollected a text in the book of Kings, where it is
-written, "Then Ahithophel set his house in order, and went and hanged
-himself." "Certainly," replied the man, "I know it to be scripture."
-"Good," added the divine; "examine the Gospel of St. Luke, and you
-will find it written, 'Go and do thou likewise.' This I earnestly
-recommend, and so farewell."
-
-[118] "Some witches, examined and executed at Mohra, in Sweden, in
-1670, confessed that the devil gives them a beast about the bigness
-and shape of a young cat, which they call a carrier, etc."--Glanville
-_On Witches_, p. 494.
-
-"For their being sucked by their familiar, we know so little of
-the nature of demons and spirits, that it is no wonder we cannot
-certainly divine the reason of so strange an action. And yet we
-may conjecture at some things that may render it less improbable.
-For some have thought that the Genii (whom both the Platonic and
-Christian antiquity thought embodied) are re-created by the reeks and
-vapours of human blood, and the spirits that proceed from them: which
-supposal (if we grant them bodies) is not unlikely, everything being
-refreshed and nourished by its like. And that they are not perfectly
-abstracted from all body and matter; besides the reverence we owe
-to the wisest antiquity, there are several considerable arguments
-I could allege to render it probable: which things supposed, the
-devil's suckling the sorceress is no great wonder, nor difficult to
-be accounted for. Or perhaps this may be only a diabolical sacrament
-and ceremony to confirm the hellish covenant."--_Glanville_, p. 10.
-
-In the above, and any future quotations I may find it necessary to
-make from this great and sagacious author, I beg it may be observed
-that I quote from the fourth edition, published in 1726.
-
-[119] Master Lilly remarketh that angels (and he must unquestionably
-mean to include fallen angels) very rarely speak unto any
-one; but when they do, it is like the Irish--very much in the
-throat.--_Lilly's Life_, p. 88.
-
-[120] Curses are not peculiar to one church; John Boys, D.D., Dean of
-Canterbury, 1629, educated at Clare Hall, in Cambridge, was famous
-for his postils in defence of our liturgy, and was also much esteemed
-for his good life. He gained great applause by turning the Lord's
-Prayer into the following execration, when he preached at Paul's
-Cross:--"Our Pope which art in Rome, cursed be thy name; perish may
-thy kingdom; hindered may thy will be, as it is in heaven, so in
-earth. Give us this day our cup in the Lord's Supper, and remit our
-monies which we have given for thy indulgences, as we send them back
-unto thee; and lead us not into heresy, but free us from misery, for
-thine is the infernal pitch and sulphur, for ever and ever. Amen."
-
-[121] "Several of the female devotees have waxen images in their
-hands. Master Glanville observeth that the devil frequently bringeth
-unto witches a waxen picture, which they, having christened it by
-the name of the person they wish to torment, thrust pins into;
-using these words as they perform their ceremonies, _Thout tout,
-a tout, tout, throughout and about.--Rentum, tormentum, etc.
-etc._"--_Glanville_, p. 297.
-
-How wonderful has Shakspeare appropriated these idle tales in his
-tragedy of _Macbeth_! He did not build upon the fables of Greece
-and Rome; but leaving the mob of heathen deities to range over the
-classic ground which gave them birth, leaving those writers who draw
-all their supplies from the fountain of antiquity to take their
-copious draughts unmolested, he adopted the creed of his own nation,
-and on the dim legends of superstition, and oral traditions of
-credulity, raised a superstructure which has stood the test of ages,
-become more admired as it has been more minutely examined, and is now
-gazed at with an almost idolatrous veneration.
-
-[122] The influence of these men is astonishing. They have the mind,
-body, and outward estate of their proselytes under their absolute
-direction; all their assertions are considered as prophecies, and
-every request has the force of a command.
-
-Men seem to have a natural tendency to a belief in divination; and
-we have many instances where the commanders of armies have made
-great use of this easy faith. When Cromwell was in Scotland, a
-soldier stood with Lilly's _Almanac_ in his hand, and as the troops
-passed him, roared out, "Lo! hear what Lilly saith: you are promised
-victory! Fight it out, brave boys; and when you have conquered--read
-the month's prediction."
-
-[123] Whosoever wisheth to know more of this Surrey Semiramis and her
-brood of rabbits, may consult the _Memoirs of M. St. Andre_, and some
-twelve or fifteen ingenious pamphlets, published about the year 1726,
-at which time a number of surgeons subscribed a guinea each to Mr.
-Hogarth, for a print from a whimsical design he had previously made
-on this very philosophical subject.
-
-[124] The figure is, I believe, intended for the boy of Bilson,
-who, with an ostrich-like appetite, swallowed as many tenpenny
-nails as would have furnished a petty ironmonger's shop. This young
-gentleman, who in his day deceived a whole county, was only thirteen
-years of age. His extraordinary fits, agitations, and the surprising
-distempers with which he seemed to be afflicted, induced those who
-saw him to believe he was bewitched, and possessed with a devil.
-During the time he was in fits, he appeared both deaf and blind;
-writhing, groaning, and panting; and although often pinched, pricked
-with needles, tickled, severely whipped, and otherwise corrected,
-never seemed sensible of what was done to him. When he was thought
-to be out of his fits, he digested nothing that was given him for
-nourishment, but would often astonish those present by bringing up
-thread, straw, crooked pins, nails, needles, etc. At this period
-his throat swelled, his tongue grew rigid, and he appeared to be
-incapable of speaking.
-
-This juvenile impostor accused a poor honest industrious old woman
-of witchcraft, and asserted that she had bewitched him. By his
-artful behaviour when she was brought into the room where he was, he
-raised in the minds of those about him a strong presumption of his
-accusations being founded. Under these impressions, the woman was
-tried at Stafford assizes, but the jury had sense enough to acquit
-her. By the judge's recommendation, the boy was committed to the care
-of the Bishop of Lichfield and Coventry, who happened to be present
-in court. His Grace took him to his palace at Eccleshall, and there,
-having the previous advice of several physicians, intended to try the
-effect of severity; but being in the meantime informed that the boy
-always fell into violent agitations upon hearing that verse of St.
-John's Gospel, "In the beginning was the Word," etc., resolved to try
-another experiment. Assuming a grave and austere countenance, he thus
-addressed him:--
-
-"Boy, it is either thou thyself or the devil that abhorrest these
-words of the Gospel; and if it be the devil, there is no doubt of his
-understanding all languages, so that he cannot but know and show his
-abhorrence when I recite the same sentence out of the Gospel in the
-Greek text; but if it be thyself, then thou art an execrable wretch,
-who playest the devil's part in loathing that portion of the Gospel
-of Christ, which above all other scripture doth express the admirable
-union of the Godhead in one Christ and Saviour, which union is the
-arch pillar of man's salvation. Wherefore look unto thyself, for now
-thou art to be put unto trial, and mark diligently whether it be
-the same scripture which shall be read unto thee out of the Greek
-Testament, at the reading whereof in the English tongue thou dost
-seem to be so much troubled and tormented."
-
-This experiment succeeded, for neither the boy nor the devil
-understood the Greek version.
-
-[125] It was deemed an approved remedy for witchcraft, to put a small
-wax model of any one under this baneful influence into a quart bottle
-with water, cork it up to confine the spirit, and place it before the
-fire. Notwithstanding all these precautions, the spirit sometimes
-forced the cork, and cast the contents of the bottle a considerable
-height.
-
-[126] Of the writings of this paragon of English monarchs--so wise
-that he was called the Solomon of Great Britain--it has been truly
-said, "They are to be found in chandlers' shops even unto this day."
-
-[127] A very grave historian relates, that the ghost of Sir George
-Villiers appeared to one who had been his servant, charging him to
-inform his son of the plan laid to destroy him! The servant obeyed
-his instructions, and informed his Grace, but the Duke wanted
-faith--was negligent--and was assassinated: though it does not seem
-probable that the crazed enthusiast who committed the murder had
-sufficient coherence of mind to lay any regular plan.
-
-[128] Drelincourt's _Defence against the Fears of Death_ is well
-written; and in the confidence that a translation would sell, the
-bookseller struck off a very large impression. They lay undisturbed
-in his warehouse until Daniel Defoe added this ridiculous narrative,
-which carried the book through one-and-twenty editions.
-
-[129] This drummer was in the early part of his life a trooper in
-Cromwell's army; and as almost all this regiment of saints considered
-themselves in St. Paul's dragoons, our drummer occasionally
-preached, exhorted, and expounded. When the Parliamentary army
-was disbanded, or put under other commanders, the manners of the
-people had a sudden and violent change; extreme strictness was
-succeeded by universal dissipation, and the whole nation displayed
-their abhorrence of their late rulers, and loyalty to their new
-sovereign, by general licentiousness. A drum beat to a psalm tune
-would no longer attract an audience; but still it was a favourite
-instrument, and our heroic trooper, being free from military
-engagements, drummed his way through the kingdom with a forged pass.
-Happening to beat up in the neighbourhood of Tedworth, he attracted
-the notice of a Mr. Mompesson, who seized the martial instrument,
-and punished the bearer. From that time his ears were assailed by a
-perpetual drumming, and his house for two or three years haunted by
-apparitions. It attracted the notice of several of the neighbouring
-clergy, and his Majesty Charles the Second, wishing to be satisfied
-about every particular, sent down a number of persons to converse
-with this noisy spirit; but during the time they stayed no spirit
-appeared, neither was the sound of a drum heard. Notwithstanding
-this, poor dub-a-dub was tried at Salisbury assizes, found guilty of
-being a wizard, and luckily escaped with only transportation for life.
-
-Upon this story was founded Addison's play of _The Drummer, or
-the Haunted House_, which has too much good sense to be generally
-relished at the theatres.
-
-The Cock Lane ghost was engaged in scratching and hammering a very
-short time before the plate was published. This ridiculous imposture
-attracted the notice of many respectable characters. That one man,
-whose writings are a mirror of truth and philosophy, and whose life
-was an honour to human nature, should be so far under the influence
-of superstition as to attend this nocturnal nonsense, draws a pitying
-sigh.
-
-[130] On the late John Wesley's particular opinions I do not presume
-to make any comment; but his zealous and unremitting exertions in
-what he deemed a good cause, added to the primitive simplicity of his
-manners, entitled him to high respect.
-
-Mr. Glanville was the patriarch of witchcraft, and therefore a very
-proper high priest in the temple of credulity. As his book gained
-him a good benefice, and as a number of his proselytes consider
-_Sadducismus Triumphatus_ entitled to equal credence with holy writ,
-I have subjoined a few extracts for the edification of those who may
-not think the volume from which they are taken worth perusal. It
-abounds with examples of barbarity, flowing from a blind and bigoted
-credulity, at which human nature shudders.
-
-A relation of the strange witchcraft, discovered in the village of
-Mohra, in Swedeland, about the year 1670:--
-
-"The news of this witchcraft coming to the king's ear, his Majesty
-was pleased to appoint commissioners, some of the clergy and some of
-the laity, to make a journey to the town above mentioned to examine
-the whole business. The commissioners met on the 12th of August at
-the parson's house, and to them the minister and several people
-of fashion complained, with tears in their eyes, of the miserable
-condition they were in, and therefore begged of them to think of some
-way whereby they might be delivered from that calamity. They gave the
-commissioners very strange instances of the devil's tyranny among
-them: how, by the help of witches, he had drawn some hundreds of
-children to him, and made them subject to his power; how he hath been
-seen to go in a visible shape through the country, and appeared daily
-to the people; how he had wrought upon the poorer sort, by presenting
-them with meat and drink, and this way allured them to himself;
-with other circumstances to be mentioned hereafter. They therefore
-begged of the Lords Commissioners to root out this hellish crew, that
-they might regain their former rest and quietness; and the rather,
-because the children, which used to be carried away in the country
-or district of Esdaile, since some witches had been burnt there,
-remained unmolested.
-
-"Examination being made, there were discovered no less
-than three-score and ten witches in the village aforesaid;
-three-and-twenty of which, freely confessing their crimes, were
-condemned to die; the rest, one pretending she was with child, and
-the others denying, and pleading not guilty, were sent to Faluna,
-where most of them were afterwards executed.
-
-"Fifteen children, which likewise confessed they were engaged in
-this witchery, died as the rest; six-and-thirty of them, between
-nine and sixteen years, who had been less guilty, were forced to
-run the gauntlet: twenty more, who had no great inclination, yet
-had been seduced to these hellish enterprises, because they were
-very young, were condemned to be lashed with rods upon their hands
-for three Sundays together, at the church door; and the aforesaid
-six-and-thirty were also doomed to be lashed this way once a week
-for a whole year together. The number of seduced children was
-about three hundred, etc. The above narrative is taken out of
-the public register, where all this, with more circumstances, is
-related."--_Glanville_, p. 494.
-
-"At Stockholm, in the year 1676, a young woman accused her mother of
-being a witch, and swore positively that she had carried her away at
-night; whereupon both the judges and ministers of the town exhorted
-the old woman to confession and repentance. But she stiffly denied
-the allegations, pleaded innocence; and though they burnt another
-witch before her face, and lighted the fire she was to burn in before
-her, yet she still justified herself, and continued to do so till
-the last; and remaining obstinate, was burnt. A fortnight or three
-weeks after, her daughter, who had accused her, came to the judges
-in open court (weeping and howling), confessed that she had accused
-her mother falsely, out of a spleen she had against her for not
-gratifying her in a thing she desired, and had charged her with a
-crime of which she was perfectly innocent. Hereupon the judges gave
-orders for _her_ immediate execution."--Horneck's _Introduction to a
-Narrative of Witchcraft, etc._--_Glanville_, p. 481.
-
-These are the horrid effects of credulity. For the dreadful
-devastations made among the human race by superstition, we may read
-the history of the Inquisition. Among myriads of examples, I was much
-struck by the following:--
-
-"Along with the Jews that were to be burnt at an _auto-da-fe_,
-there was a girl not seventeen years of age, who, standing on that
-side where the queen sat, petitioned for mercy. She was wonderfully
-pretty; and looking at the queen, while her eyes streamed with tears,
-in a most pathetic tone of voice exclaimed, 'Will not the presence
-of my sovereign make an alteration in my fate? Consider how short a
-period I have lived, and that I suffer for adherence to a religion
-which I imbibed with my mother's milk. Mercy! mercy! mercy!' The
-queen turned away her eyes,--was evidently moved by compassion,
-but--durst not ask the holy fathers for even a respite."--_M.
-d'Aunoy_, p. 66.
-
-What unlimited power! A queen dares not intercede for the pardon of
-a young girl, guilty of no other crime than adhering to the faith of
-her ancestors!
-
-One of the most shocking circumstances that attend these consecrated
-murders, is the indulgences which the Roman pontiffs have attached
-to the executioners. Those who lead the poor condemned wretches to
-the fire, and throw them into the flames, gain indulgences for one
-hundred years. They who content themselves with only seeing them
-executed, obtain fifty. What horror! The most detestable crimes, the
-most unnatural cruelties, are made a means of obtaining pardons from
-the God of mercy!
-
-[131] Whitfield's _Hymns_, p. 130.
-
-[132] See Mr. Burke's pamphlet on the French Revolution.
-
-[133] This is a fair representation of what the Guards were then. The
-highly-disciplined troop commanded by his Royal Highness of York defy
-satire.
-
-[134] See John Wilkes' history of the man after God's own heart.
-
-[135] Hogarth seems to have thought that Mr. Pitt wished to be a
-perpetual dictator; and, in truth, the Secretary's own assertion in
-some degree justified the supposition: "He would not be responsible
-for measures which he was no longer allowed to guide." Whether the
-artist was right or wrong in his opinion, I do not presume to assert:
-I have endeavoured to describe characters as he has delineated them;
-but with respect to this great man, the safest way will be to quote
-his contemporaries. I have subjoined two portraits, drawn in his
-own day; let the reader adopt that which pleases him best. They
-prove how difficult it is to ascertain what were the abilities of a
-statesman from any accounts given during his life. One party assert
-that Mr. Pitt unites, with the eloquence of Cicero and the force of
-Demosthenes, the conciseness of Sallust and the polished periods of
-Isocrates! Another,--but to extract a part is not doing justice to
-the writers.
-
-
-CHATHAM.
-
-"As this lord has long been dead to the world, we shall speak of him
-as a man that has been.
-
-"A remarkable reflection, arising from the character of Lord Chatham,
-strikes us: No statesman was ever more successful, and no statesman
-ever deserved less to have been so.
-
-"This man entered into the army very early in life, and there he
-ought to have remained. His enterprise, his rashness, and his
-scrupulous sense of honour, were qualities extremely proper in the
-profession of arms, and would have adorned any military station,
-except that of a chief commander. But the field he renounced for
-the Cabinet, and ceased to be a good soldier that he might be a
-bad statesman. In nature, he was rash, impetuous, haughty, and
-uncontrollable; and these dangerous properties were neither tempered
-nor improved by education. To those advantages which are acquired
-by study, and those great views which are communicated by habits
-of reflection, he was entirely a stranger. His quickness was not
-corrected by judgment, and his mind frequently was tired of the
-objects presented to it before it could perceive or comprehend
-them. In a country where eloquence is little known, his noise and
-vociferation acquired that name; and without the experience of
-common sense, he was extolled as superior to Demosthenes or Tully.
-His speeches were not wanting in fire, but they were innocent of
-thought. He was perhaps the only man of his time who could harangue
-for many hours without communicating one distinct and well-digested
-idea to his audience. In estimating his own merit he knew no bounds.
-His vanity was excessive: he saw every man inferior to himself: on
-every man, therefore, he lavished his contempt. Capricious to the
-most boyish excess, he was perpetually forming resolutions, which he
-abandoned before he could put them in execution. Yet his instability,
-through a fortuitous and whimsical concurrence of circumstances,
-generally led the way to success. The happy blunders of his
-administration procured him a reputation to which he had no title.
-Every scheme he planned ought to have miscarried. We admire his good
-fortune, not his wisdom. Popularity was the idol to which he bowed--a
-certain proof that his conduct was not influenced by those superior
-ideas which arise in high, liberal, and virtuous minds. Yet to this
-idol he would have sacrificed everything: it would have sacrificed
-everything to him. He possessed that intemperate pride which, instead
-of guarding him from indecent errors, led him to indiscretions; and a
-respectable character was seldom a security from the licentious fury
-of his tongue. In private life he was restless, fretful, unsocial,
-and perpetually affecting complaints which he did not feel: in public
-life he was weak, headstrong, imprudent, and had no quality of a good
-minister but enterprise. If he had continued in his first profession,
-he might have served his country with honour; but his ambition
-prompted him to assume the character of a statesman, and he abused it.
-
-"On the whole, he possessed virtues; but his passions hurried them
-into excess, and he did not even wish to restrain them."
-
-
-Hear the other side:--
-
-
-CHARACTER OF THE LATE EARL OF CHATHAM.
-
-"The Secretary stood alone; modern degeneracy had not reached him;
-original and unaccommodating--the features of his character had the
-hardihood of antiquity. No State chicanery, no narrow system of
-vicious politics, no idle contest for ministerial victories, sunk him
-to the vulgar level of the great; but overbearing and persuasive,
-his object was--England; his ambition--fame! Without dividing, he
-destroyed party; without corrupting, he made a venal age unanimous.
-France sunk beneath him. With one hand he smote the house of Bourbon,
-and wielded with the other the democracy of England. The sight of his
-mind was infinite; and his schemes were to affect, not England and
-the present age only, but Europe and posterity. Wonderful were the
-means by which these schemes were accomplished; always seasonable,
-always adequate, the suggestion of an understanding animated by
-ardour, and enlightened by prophecy. The ordinary feelings which
-make life amiable and indolent--those sensations which allure and
-vulgarize--were unknown to him. A character so exalted, so strenuous,
-so various, so authoritative, astonished a corrupt age, and the
-Treasury trembled at the name of Pitt through all her classes of
-venality. Corruption imagined, indeed, that she found defects in
-this statesman, and talked much of the inconsistency of his glory,
-and much of the ruin of his victories; but the history of his
-country and the calamity of his enemies answered and refuted her.
-Nor were his political abilities his only talents; his eloquence
-was an era in the senate, peculiar and spontaneous, familiarly
-expressing gigantic sentiments and instinctive wisdom: not like the
-torrent of Demosthenes, or the conflagration of Tully; it resembled
-sometimes the thunder and sometimes the music of the spheres. He
-did not conduct the understanding through the painful subtlety
-of argumentation; nor was he for ever on the rack of exertion,
-but rather lightened on the subject, and reached the point by the
-flashings of the mind, which, like those of his eye, were felt,
-but could not be followed. Upon the whole, there was in this man
-something that could create, reform, or subvert; an understanding, a
-spirit, and an eloquence to summon mankind to society, or to break
-the bonds of slavery asunder, and rule the wildness of free minds
-with unbounded authority: something that could establish or overwhelm
-empire, and strike a blow in the world that should resound through
-the universe."
-
-At the time of Lord Chatham being interred, it was intimated in the
-public prints that an epitaph descriptive of his talents and services
-was to be inscribed on his tombstone; and that any one writing such
-an epitaph would render an acceptable service to the committee who
-had the management of his monument. The following was sent, but as it
-was unkindly rejected by them, it is here inserted:--
-
- "HERE LIES THE BODY OF WILLIAM PITT, EARL OF CHATHAM;
- A GREAT AND ELOQUENT STATESMAN,
- WHOM THE KING DID NOT CONSULT OR EMPLOY,
- AND WHOM THE KING WAS RESOLVED NEVER TO CONSULT
- OR EMPLOY;
- A MOST INFORMED AND ENLIGHTENED SENATOR,
- A MOST CONVINCING AND PERSUASIVE ORATOR,
- WHOSE OPINIONS AND ADVICE THE PARLIAMENT HEARD WITH MOST
- ILLIBERAL IMPATIENCE,
- AND WHOSE ARGUMENTS THEY TREATED WITH MOST
- SOVEREIGN CONTEMPT.
- THESE WERE THE SENTIMENTS,
- AND THIS THE CONDUCT, OF BOTH KING AND PARLIAMENT.
- TO PERPETUATE THE MEMORY OF HIS ABILITIES,
- AND THEIR WISDOM,
- THAT KING AND THAT PARLIAMENT HAVE
- ERECTED THIS MONUMENT."
-
-
-[136] It has been generally called a Cheshire cheese. Having never
-seen this pride of the English dairy with a hole bored through the
-middle, I have ventured to pronounce it a millstone.
-
-[137] Lord Bute is said to be personified by one of the Highlanders:
-as I cannot ascertain which, my reader must discover it--if he can.
-The fireman is probably intended for the Duke of Bedford.
-
-[138] If Hogarth must be so unmercifully abused for what he inserted,
-he is entitled to some credit for what he erased. I hope this blot in
-his original design will not be considered as an additional blot on
-his escutcheon.
-
-[139] The small pyramid upon a little pedestal immediately behind
-him is, I think, an afterthought. It much resembles the ornament
-inscribed "Cyprus," which was painted on Hogarth's chariot, and might
-possibly be intended to carry some allusion to himself, for the
-stream of water from one of the garretteers just touches the point.
-
-[140] Hogarth seems to have had a strong antipathy to the politics of
-this year. In later impressions of Plate 8 of "The Rake's Progress"
-will be found a halfpenny with the same date, in which Britannia is
-represented in the character of a maniac, with dishevelled hair, etc.
-
-[141] If this sign of the Castle were not inscribed "_New_castle
-Inn," we should take it for a very old castle indeed. Its being in so
-ruinous a state, the frame shattered, and off one hook, describes the
-Duke's interest at that time. His Grace might be termed a Father of
-the Church, for he had promoted almost every bishop in the kingdom,
-and during the continuance of his administration an archbishop's
-levee could not have a more sable appearance. He resigned, or
-was turned out, which the reader pleaseth; and at his succeeding
-levee--there was not one ecclesiastic!
-
-[142] Lord Besborough and the Honourable Robert Hampden were, I
-think, joint Postmasters-General this year; a short time after, Lord
-Egmont had the situation of Lord Besborough, but soon resigned.
-
-[143] The Prince of Wales was born on the 12th of August 1762.
-Just after her Majesty was safely in her bed, the waggons with the
-treasure of the Hermione entered Saint James's Street, on which the
-king and the nobility went to the window over the palace gate to see
-them, and joined their acclamations on two such joyful occasions.
-From hence the procession, consisting of twenty waggons, etc.,
-proceeded to the tower.--_Annual Register, 1762, Art. August_.
-
-[144] In the _London Magazine_ for September 1762, I find the
-following explanation:--
-
- "The subject of this print is, as its title expresses it, 'The
- Times.' The first object is a quarter of the globe on fire, supposed
- to be Europe; and France, Germany, and Spain, denoted by their
- respective arms, are represented in flames, which appear to be
- extending themselves to Great Britain itself. And this desolation
- is continued and increased by Mr. P----, who is represented by the
- figure of Henry VIII., with a pair of bellows blowing up those
- flames which others are endeavouring to extinguish. He is mounted
- on the stilts of the populace. There is a Cheshire cheese hanging
- between his legs, and round the same '£3000 per annum.' The manager
- of the engine-pipe is L---- B----, who is assisted in working the
- engine by sailors, English soldiers, and Highlanders; but their good
- offices are impeded by a man with a wheel-barrow, overladen with
- _Monitors_ and _North Britons_, brought to be thrown in to keep up
- the flame. The respectable body depictured under Mr. P----, are the
- m---- of London, who are worshipping the idol they had formerly set
- up; whilst a German prince, who alone is sure to profit by the war,
- is amusing himself with a violin among his miserable countrymen. It
- is sufficiently apparent who is meant by the fine gentleman at the
- dining-room window of the Temple Coffeehouse, who is squirting at
- the director of the engine-pipe, whilst his garretteers are engaged
- in the same employment. The picture of the Indian alludes to the
- advocates for the retaining our West India conquests, which, they
- say, will only increase excess and debauchery; and the breaking down
- the Newcastle Arms, and the drawing up the patriotic ones, refer to
- the resignation of a noble Duke, and the appointment of a successor.
- The Dutchman smoking his pipe, with a fox peeping out beneath him,
- the emblem of cunning, waiting the issue; the waggon with the
- treasures of the Hermione; the unnecessary marching of the militia,
- signified by the Norfolk jig; the dove with the olive branch; and the
- miseries of war, are obvious, and need no explication."
-
- In a newspaper of the day is the following whimsical description of
- the characters the writer chooses to say were really intended:--
-
- "The principal figure, in the character of Henry VIII., appears
- to be not Mr. P----, but another person, whose power is signified
- by his bulk of carcase, treading on Mr. P----, represented by
- 3000. The bellows may signify his well-meant though ineffectual
- endeavours to extinguish the fire by wind, which, though it will
- put out a small flame, will cherish a large one. The guider of the
- engine-pipe I should think can only mean his M----, who unweariedly
- tries, by a more proper method, to stop the flames of war, in which
- he is assisted by all his good subjects both by sea and land,
- notwithstanding any interruption from _Auditors_ or _Britons_,
- _Monitors_ or _North Britons_. The respectable body at the bottom can
- never mean the magistrates of London: Mr. H---- has more sense than
- to abuse so respectable a body. Much less can it mean the judges. I
- think it may as likely be the Court of Session in Scotland, either
- in the attitude of adoration, or with outspread arms, intending to
- catch their patron should his stilts give way. The Frenchman may
- very well sit at his ease among his miserable countrywomen, as he
- is not unacquainted that France has always gained by negotiating
- what she lost in fighting. The fine gentleman at the window, with
- his garretteers, and the barrow of periodical papers, refers to the
- present contending parties of every denomination. The breaking of
- the Newcastle Arms alludes to the resignation of a great personage;
- and the replacing of them by the sign of the Four Clenched Fists
- may be thought emblematical of the great economy of his successor.
- The Norfolk jig signifies in a lively manner the alacrity of all
- his Majesty's forces during the war; and G. T. (George Townshend)
- _fecit_, is an opportune compliment paid to Lord Townshend, who, in
- conjunction with Mr. Wyndham, published _A Plan of Discipline for
- the use of the Norfolk Militia_, quarto, and had been the greatest
- advocate for the establishment of our present militia. The picture of
- the Indian alive from America, is a satire on our late uncivilised
- behaviour to the three chiefs of the Cherokee nation who were lately
- in this kingdom, and the bags of money set this in a still clearer
- point of view, signifying the sums gained by showing them at our
- public gardens. The sly Dutchman with his pipe seems pleased with the
- combustion, from which he thinks he shall be a gainer; and the Duke
- of Nivernois, under the figure of a dove, is coming from France to
- give a cessation of hostilities to Europe."
-
-[145] In the first impressions, considering Mr. Pitt as a tyrant, he
-introduced him in the character of Henry VIII.; this was afterwards
-properly altered.
-
-[146] "There are strong prejudices in favour of straight lines, as
-constituting true beauty in the human form, where they never should
-appear. A middling connoisseur thinks no profile has beauty without
-a very straight nose; and if the forehead be continued straight with
-it, he thinks it is still more sublime. The common notion that a
-person should be straight as an arrow, and perfectly erect, is of
-this kind. If a dancing-master were to see his scholar in the easy
-and gracefully turned attitude of the Antinous, he would cry shame
-on him, and tell him he looked as crooked as a ram's horn, and bid
-him hold up his head as he himself did."--_Preface to the Analysis of
-Beauty_, p. 8.
-
-[147] Of Ramsay's manner, Churchill had an opinion similar to
-Hogarth's. Speaking of Scotland, he says,
-
- "From thence the Ramsays, men of 'special note,
- Of whom one paints as well as t'other wrote."
-
- --_Prophecy of Famine._
-
-
-[148] The British Lion seems by no means delighted at the
-distribution he is forced to make. The strong arm, drawing a long
-lever, has distorted his mouth, and, though gagged, his wry face
-shows his agony.
-
-[149] Among the admirable things recorded as Mr. Wilkes' jests, is a
-remark upon this same _red_ book: "Sir, it is the only book now red"
-(_read_).
-
-[150] See the _North Briton_.
-
-[151] As a paint-pot and brushes are placed in the corner, it is
-supposed Hogarth intended to represent Himself as one of the group:
-perhaps this may be the figure.
-
-[152] The porter with his knot upon his head, and a pipe in his
-mouth, leans against the pillory.
-
-[153] Let it be observed, that in this, as well as in many more of
-Mr. Hogarth's prints, the buildings are reversed: in the drawing from
-whence the engraving was made they were right.
-
-[154] To be told that I am wrong in some of their names will not
-surprise me. The figure presenting a snuff-box, I judged to be
-Earl Temple, from his face having been originally etched without
-features, and a nose and chin added. Another with a riband, whose
-back only is seen, from its similarity to an engraving after the
-design of a noble marquis, I have denominated Lord Winchelsea. A
-higher figure, on his left hand, is possibly the Duke of Bedford; the
-interrogating profile, with a hat on, somewhat lower, has the air
-of Mr. Rigby.[155] I have conjectured that a gentleman remarkably
-rotund is intended for Lord Melcombe; the noble lord beneath him may
-be designed for the Duke of Devonshire; and the grave senator in
-spectacles, above the ear-trumpet, is perhaps Earl Bath.
-
-[155] The rail, which I have said was perhaps intended to divide the
-Commons from the Lords, might yet be designed to divide the men most
-active in the Opposition from the Ministry. To either supposition
-there are objections which I cannot solve.
-
-[156] A man in a porter-house, classing himself as an eminent
-literary character, was asked by one of his companions what right
-he had to assume such a title? the reply was remarkable: "Sir, I'd
-have you know, I had the honour of chalking Number 45 upon every door
-between Temple Bar and Hyde Park Corner."
-
-[157] The public must certainly have had the same opinion, for at
-that period Mr. Wilkes was in the meridian of his popularity. Though
-not exactly like Gay's hare in the fable, he had many friends, and
-Mr. Nichols relates, that a copperplate printer informed him near
-four thousand copies of this etching were worked off in a few weeks.
-These must necessarily have been sold, and we may naturally infer
-were bought by his friends.
-
-[158] Equally memorable was his reply to a friend who requested
-him to sit to Sir Joshua Reynolds, and have his portrait placed
-in Guildhall, being then so popular a character that the Court of
-Aldermen would willingly have paid the expense. "No," replied he,
-"No! they shall never have a delineation of my face, that will carry
-to posterity so damning a proof of what it was. Who knows but a time
-may come when some future Horace Walpole will treat the world with
-another quarto volume of historic doubts, in which he may prove that
-the numerous squinting portraits on tobacco papers and halfpenny
-ballads, inscribed with the name of John Wilkes, are 'a weak
-invention of the enemy,' for that I was not only unlike them, but, if
-any inference can be drawn from the general partiality of the fair
-sex, the handsomest man of the age I lived in."
-
-[159] If Hogarth at first intended it for a caricature, who knows but
-the old lion might have repented himself, for he afterwards threw the
-original drawing into the fire; it was snatched out by Mrs. Lewis.
-
-[160] That Hogarth should be unseen by all, and yet seen by Virtue,
-if not a blunder, is very nearly allied to it.
-
-[161] This remark extends no further than to the figure of Churchill.
-In the little design on a palette, which was added some time after
-the print was published, there is much wit.
-
-[162] These angry strains had, I suppose, their origin in Hogarth
-having on some occasion charged Churchill with falsehood. The
-accusation might probably allude to personal satire, and the bard's
-warmest admirers must admit, that though his characters are highly
-drawn, and still more highly coloured, they are rather political than
-historical, rather poetical than biographical. An uneducated painter,
-who had not taste enough to conceive that poetry, however animated,
-could make that truth which he knew to be falsehood, might possibly
-give his opinion in very displeasing terms.
-
-[163] Porter was the poet's favourite beverage; but though he quaffed
-more _entire butt than bard beseems_, he drank still deeper draughts
-from the fountain of Helicon. Many of his stanzas breathe inspiration.
-
-[164] Much wretched writing, in both verse and prose, concerning this
-contest between the pencil and the pen, was inserted in the prints of
-the day. The following explanation, indifferent as it may be thought,
-is the best I happen to have seen:--
-
-"The bear with a tattered band represents the former strength and
-abilities of Mr. Hogarth; the full pot of beer likewise shows that
-he was in a land of plenty. The stump of a headless tree, with the
-notches, and on it written 'Lie,' signifies Mr. Hogarth's former art,
-and the many productions thereof, wherein he has excelled even nature
-itself, and which of course must be but lies, flattery, and fallacy,
-the painter's prerogative; and the stump of a tree only being left,
-shows that there can be no more fruit expected from thence, but that
-it only stands as a record of his former services. The butcher's dog
-trampling on Mr. Churchill's Epistle alludes to the present state
-of Mr. Hogarth, who is now reduced from the strength of a bear to a
-blind butcher's dog, not able to distinguish, but degrading, his best
-friends; or perhaps giving the public a hint to read that Epistle,
-where his case is more fully laid before them. The next matter to be
-explained is the subscription-box, and under it is a book said to
-contain _A List of Subscribers to the North Briton_, as well as one
-of _A New Way to Pay Old Debts_. Mr. Hogarth mentioned the _North
-Briton_ to avoid the censure of the rabble in the street, who he knew
-would neither pity nor relieve him; and as Mr. Churchill was reputed
-to be the writer of that paper, it would seem to give a colour in
-their eyes of its being intended against Mr. Churchill. Mr. Hogarth
-meant only to show his necessity, and that a book entitled _A List of
-Subscribers to the North Briton_ contained in fact a list of those
-who should contribute to the support of Mr. Hogarth in old age. By
-the book entitled _A New Way to Pay Old Debts_, he can only mean
-this, that when a man is become disabled to get his livelihood and
-much in debt, the only shift he has left is to go a-begging to his
-creditors.
-
-"There are likewise in this print some of his old tools, without any
-hand to use them."
-
-[165] This thought might possibly be suggested by one of Shakspeare's
-witches:
-
- "Sleep shall neither night nor day
- Hang upon his pent-house lid,
- He shall live a man forbid," etc.
-
-How admirable a contrast is formed by Robert Lloyd's description of
-an opposite character!
-
- "Dull folly,--not the wanton wild,
- Imagination's younger child,
- Had taken lodgings in his face,
- As finding that a vacant place."
-
-
-[166] "Little did the sportive satirist imagine that the power of
-pleasing was so soon to cease in both! Hogarth died in four weeks
-after the publication of this poem, and Churchill survived him but
-nine days. In some lines which were printed in November 1764, the
-compiler of these anecdotes took occasion to lament that
-
- "'Scarce had the friendly tear,
- For Hogarth shed, escap'd the generous eye
- Of feeling pity, when again it flow'd
- For Churchill's fate. Ill can we bear the loss
- Of Fancy's twin-born offspring, close allied
- In energy of thought, though different paths
- They sought for fame!--Though jarring passions sway'd
- The living artists, let the funeral wreath
- Unite their memory!'"
-
- --_Nichols' Biographical Anecdotes of Hogarth._
-
-
-[167] In Mr. Churchill's will was the following item:--
-
-"I desire my dear friend John Wilkes, Esq., to collect and publish
-my works, with the remarks and explanations he has prepared, and any
-other he thinks proper to make."
-
-Could Mr. Churchill really think it was possible that notes by Mr.
-Wilkes, or any other man, would justify his malignant attack upon
-Hogarth?
-
-[168] What a satire upon himself! What an apology for Hogarth's print!
-
-[169] This is a very singular acknowledgment: it is, I believe, the
-first instance of a person feeling himself flattered at being told
-that he had murdered an old man.
-
-[170] He frequently engraved a ticket for one series of prints, and
-presented it with another.
-
-[171] See the engraved title-page to vol. ii.
-
-[172] In the reduced copy I have ventured to abridge this title,
-though the very ingenious baptisms of sundry modern prints would have
-given ample countenance to the old inscription. For example: A girl
-hugging a dog in her arms is, with great attention to analogy, called
-"Nature;" and a woman with a large mallet in one hand, and a tenpenny
-nail in the other, "Art."
-
-A female with a consumptive curd-and-whey countenance, that would not
-have got her a lover even in Otaheite, they have miscalled "Beauty;"
-and a little gorged misshapen boy, with swollen cheeks, and a bow and
-arrow, they kindly inform you is "Love."
-
-A farmer's daughter with a basket on her arm, in which are two
-pigeons quarrelling for a straw, and drawing it different ways, is
-christened "Conjugal Peace;" and a very picturesque landscape, with a
-crowd of figures in the background, baptized "Solitude!"
-
-Innumerable other instances might be given; but these are sufficient
-to prove, that in erroneous inscription Hogarth is not alone.
-
-[173] This good gentleman was undoubtedly designed to place his hand
-upon his heart; but Hogarth had either heard of some examples similar
-to one which was lately seen at Dr. John Hunter's, or has, as in many
-other instances, reversed the drawing.
-
-[174] The Countess Spencer, who has dignified the arts by making
-several very elegant drawings, has given a sanction to this baptism
-in a print lately engraved by Bartolozzi.
-
-[175] The pit was formerly the seat of the critics, and dread of
-authors; our critics of the present day have _taken to_ the green
-boxes.
-
-[176] The father of Huggins was warden of the Fleet Prison, and in
-that office guilty of extortion, cruelty, breach of trust, and many
-other crimes; he accumulated a considerable fortune, and died at
-ninety years of age. His son William was educated for holy orders,
-and sent to Magdalen College, Oxford, where he took the degree of
-M.A., but on the death of his elder brother gave up all thoughts
-of entering into the church. In 1757 some flattering verses were
-addressed to him on his version of Ariosto: they are preserved in
-the _Gentleman's Magazine_, vol. xxvii. p. 180; but, except by the
-author and the person to whom they are written, were probably never
-read through. A specimen of his translation from Dante, which was
-published in the _British Magazine_ for 1760, exhibits an unequivocal
-proof that Mr. Huggins was worthy of his encomiast. He died the 2d
-of July 1761, and left to posterity a MS. tragedy, a MS. translation
-of Dante, a MS. farce, and though last, not least in estimation--two
-thousand pounds per annum.
-
-[177] He was a respectable performer on the violin, some years
-chapelmaster at Antwerp, and several seasons leader of the band at
-Marybone Gardens. He published a collection of musical compositions,
-to which was annexed a portrait of himself, characterized by three
-lines from Milton:
-
- "Thou honour'dst verse, and verse must lend her wing
- To honour thee, the priest of Phœbus' quire,
- That tun'st her happiest lines in hymn or song."
-
-He died in 1750, aged seventy years, and gives one additional name
-to a catalogue I have somewhere seen of very old professors of
-music, who, saith my author, "generally live unto a greater age than
-persons in any other way of life, from their souls being so attuned
-unto harmony, that they enjoy a perpetual peace of mind." It has
-been observed, and I believe justly, that thinking is a great enemy
-to longevity, and that, consequently, they who think least will be
-likely to live longest. The quantity of thought necessary to make an
-adept in this divine science must be determined by those who have
-studied it.
-
-[178] In thus bringing to shame the ignorant or prejudiced audience
-who could be blind to his genius, he hath been right worthily
-imitated by sundry great writers in this our day.
-
-[179] I once saw the following MS. note in the marginal leaf of this
-oratorio: "If the writer of this had his desserts,
-
- "Full soon would injur'd Judith slay him,
- Or pious Jael, Siser-a him."
-
-
-[180] At a time when Doctor Shippen, I mean the astronomical Shippen,
-was principal of Brazennose College, the musical professor died,
-and the Doctor offered himself as a candidate for the place. To the
-science he was a total stranger, but by strength of interest carried
-the election, though opposed by a gentleman highly eminent for his
-musical abilities.
-
-In less than twelve moons the professor of astronomy died, and the
-electors, ashamed of their former conduct, went in a body to the
-musical gentleman they had before rejected, and offered him the
-vacant astronomical chair. He was weak enough to refuse; because,
-forsooth, he did not understand astronomy, and died without place,
-pension, or university honour.
-
-Even now these things are managed in much the same way. A nobleman
-who had the privilege of appointing a chorister to Christ Church,
-Cambridge, sent them one who was not only ignorant of music, but
-croaked like an old raven, because the fellow had a vote for a
-Huntingdonshire borough. This gave rise to the following epigram:--
-
- "A singing man, and cannot sing!
- From whence arose your patron's bounty?
- Give us a song!--Excuse me, sir,
- My voice is in another county."
-
-
-[181] "A chief betokeneth a senatour, or honourable personage,
-borrowed from the Greek, and is a word signifying a head; and as the
-head is the chief part in a man, so the chief in the escocheon should
-be a reward of such only, whose high merites have procured them chief
-places, esteem, or love amongst men."--GUILLIM.
-
-[182] "The bearing of clouds in armes (saith Upton) doth import some
-excellencie."
-
-[183] Originally printed _docter_, but altered.
-
-[184] One of them, but I know not which, is said to be intended for
-Doctor Pierce Dod, physician to St. Bartholomew's Hospital, who died
-August 6, 1754. Another for Doctor Bamber, a celebrated anatomist,
-physician, and accoucheur, to whose estate the present Gascoyne
-family succeeded, and by whose surname two of them have been baptized.
-
-[185] When very young, I was once in company with the Chevalier at
-the house of a Doctor Cheyne Harte, in Shrewsbury, and I remember his
-person having a strong resemblance to this print. I also recollect
-that he carried his gold, silver, and copper coin in his coat pocket.
-He had uncommon skill in his profession, but was ridiculously
-ostentatious, and is said to have expended near a thousand guineas
-in a set of gold instruments. At this species of foppery Hogarth has
-well hinted, in the laced or Dresden ruffles with which he alone is
-decorated. His portrait was painted at Rome by the Chevalier Riche.
-Beneath it is the following inscription: "Joannes Taylor, Medicus in
-Optica expertissimus, multisque in Academiis celeberrimis Socius."
-
-[186] To this volume there is the longest title I remember to have
-seen: it might serve for a table of contents; and containing a sort
-of brief abstract of his adventures, I have inserted it:--
-
- "_The Life and Extraordinary History of Chevalier John Taylor_,
- Member of the most celebrated Academies, Universities, and Societies
- of the learned--Chevalier in several of the first courts of the
- world--illustrious (by patent) in the apartments of many of the
- greatest Princes,[187] Ophthalmiater Pontifical, Imperial, and
- Royal--to his late Majesty--to the Pontifical Court--to the Person
- of her Imperial Majesty--to the Kings of Poland, Denmark, Sweden,
- etc.--to the several Electors of the Holy Empire--to the Royal
- Infant Duke of Parma--to the Prince of Saxe-Gotha, Serenissime,
- brother to her Royal Highness the Princess Dowager of Wales--to the
- Prince Royal of Poland--to the late Prince of Orange--to the present
- princes of Bavaria, Modena, Lorraine, Brunswick, Anspach, Bareith,
- Liege, Salzbourg, Middlebourg, Hesse Cassel, Holstein, Zerbst,
- Georgia, etc.--Citizen of Rome, by a public act in the name of the
- senate and people--Fellow of that College of Physicians--Professor
- in Optics--Doctor in Medicine, and Doctor in Chirurgery, in several
- universities abroad; who has been on his travels upwards of thirty
- years, with little or no interruption, during which he has not only
- been several times in every town in these kingdoms, but in every
- kingdom, province, state, and city of the least consideration--in
- every court,[188] presented to every crowned head and sovereign
- prince in all Europe, without exception: containing the greatest
- variety of the most entertaining and interesting adventures, that,
- it is presumed, has ever yet been published in any country or in any
- language."
-
-[187] When he was once enumerating the honours he had received
-from the different princes of Europe, and the orders with which he
-had been dignified by innumerable sovereigns, a gentleman present
-remarked that he had not named the King of Prussia; and added, "I
-suppose, sir, he never gave you any order?" "You are mistaken, sir,"
-replied the Chevalier: "he gave me a very peremptory order to quit
-his dominions."
-
-[188] On his return from a tour on the Continent, he once met a plain
-man, who, addressing him with great familiarity, was repulsed with
-a cold formal frown,--and, "Sir, I really don't remember you." "Not
-remember me! why, my goodness, Doctor! we both lodged on one floor in
-Round Court." "Round Court,--Round Court,--Round Court?--Sir, I have
-been in every court in Europe, but of such a court as Round Court I
-have no recollection."
-
-[189] _September 16, 1736._ "On Thursday Mrs. Mapp's plate of ten
-guineas was run for at Epsom. A mare, called Mrs. Mapp, won the first
-heat, when Mrs. Mapp gave the rider a guinea, and swore, if he won
-the plate she would give him a hundred."
-
-_September 23, 1736._ "Mrs. Mapp continues making extraordinary
-cures: she has now set up an equipage, and on Sunday waited on her
-Majesty."
-
-_October 19, 1736, London Daily Post._ "Mrs. Mapp being present
-at the acting of _The Wife's Relief_, concurred in the universal
-applause of a crowded audience. This play was advertised by the
-desire of Mrs. Mapp, the famous bone-setter from Epsom."
-
-_October 21, 1736._ "On Saturday evening there was such a concourse
-of people at the Theatre Royal in Lincoln's-Inn Fields to see the
-famous Mrs. Mapp, that several ladies and gentlemen were obliged to
-return for want of room. The confusion at going out was so great,
-that several ladies and gentlemen had their pockets picked, and many
-of the former lost their fans, etc. Yesterday she was elegantly
-entertained by Doctor Ward, at his house in Pall Mall."
-
-"On Saturday, and yesterday, Mrs. Mapp performed several operations
-at the Grecian Coffeehouse, particularly one upon a niece of Sir Hans
-Sloane,[190] to his great satisfaction, and her credit. The patient
-had her shoulder-bone out for about nine years."
-
-_December 22, 1737._ "Died last week, at her lodgings near Seven
-Dials, the much talked of Mrs. Mapp, the bone-setter, so miserably
-poor, that the parish was obliged to bury her."
-
-[190] I have heard it suggested that this harlequin figure, received
-as Mrs. Mapp, was really intended for Sir Hans Sloane.
-
-[191] He was originally in partnership with his brother, a drysalter
-in Thames Street. By a fire which broke out in an adjoining house,
-their joint property was destroyed, and Mr. Ward escaped by
-clambering over the tops of several houses in his shirt.
-
-In the year 1717 he was returned member for Marlborough, but by
-a vote of the House of Commons declared not duly elected. It is
-imagined that he was in some manner connected with his brother John
-Ward (immortalized by Mr Pope) in the South Sea Bubble, for he left
-England rather abruptly; and during his residence abroad, is supposed
-to have turned Roman Catholic.
-
-It was during his exile that he acquired such a knowledge of medicine
-and chemistry as was afterwards the means of raising him to a state
-of affluence. About the year 1733 he began to practise physic, and
-combated for some time the united efforts of argument, jealousy, and
-ridicule, by each of which he was opposed. By some lucky cures, and
-particularly one on a relation of Sir Joseph Jekyl, Master of the
-Rolls, he triumphed over his enemies; was, by a vote of the House of
-Commons, exempted from being visited by the censors of the college,
-and called in to the assistance of George the Second, whose hand
-he cured; and in lieu of a pecuniary compensation, was, at his own
-request, permitted to ride in his gaudy and heavy equipage through
-St. James's Park, an honour seldom granted to any but persons of
-rank. Besides this, the King gave a commission to his nephew, the
-late General Gansel.
-
-He distributed medicine and advice to the poor gratis. There is as
-bad a print as I have seen representing him thus employed. By such
-conduct he acquired great popularity, and was, indeed, entitled to
-great praise.
-
-He died December 21, 1761, at a very advanced age, and left the
-receipts for compounding his medicines to Mr. Page, member for
-Chichester, who bestowed them on two charitable institutions, which
-have derived considerable advantage from the profits attending their
-sale.
-
-In the _London Chronicle_ for February 27, 1762, is the following
-intimation:--
-
- "A monument is going to be erected in Westminster Abbey, next to that
- of Mr. Dryden's, to the memory of Joshua Ward, of Whitehall, Esq., on
- which will be placed a fine bust of the deceased, that had been long
- in his possession."
-
-[192] The veil which was then spread over this science has been
-partly removed by the publication of Doctor Buchan's _Domestic
-Medicine_,--a treatise which I have frequently heard reprobated by
-gentlemen of the Faculty, for laying open to the world, in language
-so perspicuous, those mysterious secrets which had been before
-disguised in dog Latin: it has, however, gone through more editions
-than any book in this language, except _Robinson Crusoe_ and the
-_Pilgrim's Progress_.
-
-[193] The poet, in this instance, laboureth under a mistake; for I
-am informed by a gentleman learned in the law, that if a physician
-neglecteth to receive his fees, and his patient recovereth, he hath
-no legal claim, neither will an action lie; but if his patient dieth,
-an action against the executors is good: the Court will admit the
-claim, and the jury find a verdict, with full costs of suit.
-
-This is very proper, and proveth that _law_ and _equity_ are the
-same; and that if a physician _doth his business_, he can recover his
-reward; but if he neglecteth, and _his patient doth not die_, why
-should he have any remuneration?
-
-[194] What caricature is in painting, burlesque is in writing; and in
-the same manner the comic writer and painter correlate to each other.
-But here I shall observe, that as in the former the painter seems to
-have the advantage, so it is in the latter infinitely on the side of
-the writer; for the monstrous is much easier to paint than describe,
-and the ridiculous to describe than paint. And though perhaps this
-latter species doth not in either science so strongly affect and
-agitate the muscles as the other, yet it will be owned, I believe,
-that a more rational and useful pleasure arises to us from it.
-
-"He who should call the ingenious Hogarth a burlesque painter, would,
-in my opinion, do him very little honour; for sure it is much easier,
-much less the subject of admiration, to paint a man with a nose or
-any other feature of a monstrous size, or to expose him in some
-absurd or monstrous attitude, than to express the affections of men
-on canvas. It has been thought a vast commendation of a painter to
-say, his figures seem to breathe; but surely it is a much greater and
-nobler applause, that they appear to think."
-
-This is Fielding's opinion, and the _fiat_ of such a writer ought
-to have great weight; for his characters and Hogarth's pictures are
-drawn from the same source.
-
-[195] I have adhered to Hogarth's orthography.
-
-[196] She was suspected to have been concerned in the murder of Mr.
-Nesbit in 1729, near Drury Lane, for which one Kelly, _alias_ Owen,
-suffered death. The only ground of his conviction was a bloodied
-razor, that was known to be his property, being found under the
-murdered man's head. Kelly died protesting his innocence, and
-solemnly asserted that he had lent the razor to a woman whose name
-and habitation he did not know.
-
-[197] It appeared on the trial that Mrs. Duncombe had only fifty-four
-pounds in her box; and fifty-three pounds eleven shillings and
-sixpence were found upon Malcolm.
-
-[198] One part of her defence was, it must be acknowledged, rather
-weak: she declared that seventeen pounds of the money found in her
-hair was sent to her by her father; but on inquiry, it was proved
-that he lived in a state of extreme and pitiable poverty in the city
-of Dublin, where she was born.
-
-[199] The crowd was so great, that a Mrs. Strangeways, who lived in
-Fleet Street, near Serjeants' Inn, crossed the street from her own
-house to Mrs. Coulthurst's, on the opposite side of the way, over the
-heads and shoulders of the populace.
-
-[200] This paper he sold for twenty pounds; and the substance of it
-was printed in the _Gentleman's Magazine_ for 1733. Peddington died
-September 18, 1734.
-
-[201] The late Mr. Barry, whose works are an honour to his age and
-country, and would alone give celebrity and immortality to the
-English school, in his picture of "Elysium," or the state of final
-retribution, has introduced Sir Isaac Newton looking at the solar
-system, which an angel is to him uncovering. This is one of the most
-sublime and poetical thoughts I ever saw expressed upon canvas.
-
-[202] That his conquests have in their consequences rendered the
-people he subdued unhappy, must be admitted, and is to be lamented.
-Though I am inclined to suspect that the narrations of Bartholomew
-de las Casas, and some other writers, are greatly exaggerated, we
-have indisputable evidence of such oppression, murder, and massacre,
-as must make every reader shudder. If the same system is still
-pursued,--and I fear it has been but little softened,--the evil will
-correct itself; and who will not rejoice at the total extirpation
-of these merciless tyrants, and emancipation of that unhappy race
-whom they have so long enslaved? Let us not, from this, censure the
-extension of commerce, or civilisation of the savage; for both these
-great objects ultimately tend to make men wiser, better, and happier.
-To the beardless philosopher, who adopts the fascinating visions
-of Rousseau, is an advocate for the blessings of barbarism, and
-contends for the superiority of the savage to the civilised animal,
-I earnestly recommend the perusal of Mickle's _Introduction to the
-Lusiad_. If the arguments adduced by that excellent writer--and, from
-intimate personal knowledge, I venture to add, excellent man--will
-not convince him, and he still languishes for pathless wilds, let him
-retreat from civilised society to the frozen rocks of Kamtschatka, or
-join the Aborigines of New Holland.
-
-[203] "When he promised a new hemisphere, it was insisted upon
-that no such hemisphere could exist; and when he had discovered
-it, asserted that it had been known long before. The honour was
-given to the Carthaginians; and, to prove they deserved it, a book
-of Aristotle's was quoted, which Aristole never wrote. It was
-further said, that one Martin Behem went from Nuremburg to the
-Straits of Magellan, in 1460, with a patent from the Duchess of
-Burgundy, who, as she was not alive at that time, could not issue
-patents."--VOLTAIRE.
-
-[204] Some authors have said from the port of Gomera, and dated his
-departure on the 6th of September. This _momentous_ point must be
-decided by those who study minute chronology; and we are so fortunate
-as to live in the same age with a writer who can determine the day of
-the month and day of the week when Adam was created:
-
-"Adam created, Friday, October 28, 4004; died, 3034 before Christ,
-aged 930."--Trusler's _Chronology_.
-
-[205] Americus Vespucius, a merchant of Florence, had the honour
-of giving his name to this new half of the globe, in which he did
-not possess one acre of land; and pretended to be the first who
-discovered the continent. Admitting it true that he first discovered
-it, the glory is due to the man who had the penetration to see that
-the voyage was practicable, and the courage to perform it. Columbus
-made three voyages, as viceroy and admiral, five years before
-Americus made one as a geographer; but Vespucius writing to his
-friends at Florence that he had discovered a new world, they took his
-word, and the citizens decreed that a grand illumination should be
-made before the door of his house every three years, on the feast of
-All Saints. Such are the accidents by which honours are attained. A
-merchant gives his name to one half of the globe from happening to be
-on board a fleet that in 1489 sailed along the coast of Brazil!
-
-[206] This story has been told of Brunelleschi, who improved the
-architecture of Florence many years before Columbus was born, and it
-has been since related of many others. These ambulatory anecdotes are
-transferred from one traveller to another, like the wishing-cap of
-Fortunatus, that was made to fit every head on which it was placed.
-
-[207] "There is scarce an Egyptian, Greek, or Roman deity, but hath a
-twisted serpent, twisted cornucopia, or some symbol winding in this
-manner, to accompany it."--_Preface to Analysis of Beauty_, p. 18.
-
-[208] Some of these were in wood, and some in copper. The painter,
-when once asked why he did not answer them, replied, that "he had not
-seen one which promised to live so long as it would take to engrave
-a plate." A few of these poignant satires I have seen; but they have
-now attained a black letter value, and are seldom to be found except
-in the cabinets of the curious. A series of six or eight, beginning
-with one entitled "The Butifyer, or a Touch on the Times," Plate I.,
-were designed and engraved by an artist of deserved celebrity.[209]
-With a frankness for which he is remarkable, and which does him
-honour, he once acknowledged to me, that being a very young man, he
-was deceived by the loud clamours of certain veterans, at that time
-leaders in the arts; but had he seen Hogarth's merit then as he does
-now, nothing should have induced him to attempt the ridicule of such
-talents.
-
-[209] Mr. Paul Sandby.
-
-[210] This alludes to the time Hogarth thought would elapse before
-Stuart's plan was completed; and the prediction was amply verified,
-for the second volume of _Athens_ was not published until 1789 or 90,
-though the title-page is dated 1787.
-
-[211] Stuart being once questioned by Frank Hayman upon his right
-to assume both these titles, said that "Poetry was his wife, and
-Architecture his mistress." "You may call them so," said Hayman, "but
-I never heard that you had living issue by either."
-
-[212] The mortification Hogarth naturally felt at seeing more money
-given for a drawing of an ancient pig-sty than he received for his
-most capital work, was unquestionably the strongest inducement.
-
-[213] A description of this print was published in _The Beauties of
-all the Magazines_ for 1761; part of it I have subjoined:--
-
- "Over the first row is written the title Episcopal. The first capital
- discovers only a forked nose, lips, and one eye; the rest of the
- face is eclipsed by the wig's protuberance. The next three etchings
- are only the hinder parts of heads; by these Mr. Hogarth satirizes
- the present age for their immoralities, which are so notorious, that
- three-fifths of the religious orders turn their backs upon us, not
- being able to behold such wickedness.
-
- "The last visage in the line is marked with true pedantic contempt;
- the wig's fore-top is like the forked hill of Parnassus, and there is
- a roll round the forehead, like a MS. scroll; the eyelids are almost
- closed, which denotes _the wise man's wink_, or that he can see the
- world with half an eye. The muscles of the countenance are curled up
- into disdain, and he seems to say, 'I despise ye, ye illiterati!'
-
- "The immense quantity of grizzle which is wove into the wigs carries
- a twofold design--for reverence and for warmth. The make of these
- canonicals evinces the care this order take of themselves, for the
- sake of those committed to their trust; and the profusion of curls or
- friz in each denotes the wearer must be most learned, because, as the
- country folk say, Why should they put a double coat of thatch upon a
- barn, without there was a greater proportion than ordinary of grain
- housed therein?
-
- "The next row is inscribed Aldermanic. The first wig has two ends,
- exactly like the dropsical legs of some over-gorged glutton; and the
- three-quartered face indicates Plenty, Porter, and Politics. On the
- brow, domestical significancy is seated; a look necessary to each
- master who dozes in his arm-chair on the Sunday evening, while his
- lady reads prayers to the rest of the family. It is a countenance
- which carries dignity with it even at the upper end of a table at a
- turtle-eating.
-
- "The second has one lock dependent like a sheep's bushy tail. This
- man could make speeches, knew the nature of debentures, and was much
- harassed by cent. per cent. commerce. Many are the sleepless nights
- he has passed in scheming how to fix, if for only half a day, the
- fluctuating chances of 'Change Alley.
-
- "The third wig is, as the sailors say, 'all aback.' By the swelling
- of the full bottom, we have an idea of Magna Charta consequence, and
- guess that the wearer would say something--if he could but see it.
-
- "The next is parted triangular-wise, to fall each side the shoulders.
- This design was originally taken from a nutting-stick. Thus one of
- our finest capitals was delineated from a square tile, a weed, and a
- basket.
-
- "With all modest conjecture we presume, from our intense application
- to mathematics, that the semicircular sweep at the end of the last
- full bottom signifies a gold chain. But as we are Englishmen, and
- will have nothing to do with chains, we shall hasten to the wigs and
- chins in the third, entitled 'Lexonical.'
-
- "Great men are always celebrated for great things: Cicero for his
- wart; Ovid for a nose almost equal to Slawkenbergius'; and this
- portrait seems to be ushered into notice by the curvature of the
- chin. How venerably elegant do these Lexonicals appear! Here is
- indeed law at full length. Special pleadings in the fore-top;
- declarations, replications, rejoinders, issues, and demurrers in
- every buckle. The knotty points of practice in the intricacies of the
- twisted tail, and the depth of the whole wig, emblematically express
- the length of a Chancery suit, while the black coif behind looks like
- a blister."
-
-[214] A term peculiarly appropriated to the Court of Common Pleas.
-
-[215] To the honour of Sir John Fielding, he once attempted to
-prevent its being performed, but the attempt failed. Since that time
-it has been so completely disfigured by Mr. Charles Bannister being
-disguised in the character of Polly, and Macheath personated by Mrs.
-Cargill, etc. etc. etc., that no person who had the least pretensions
-to taste would be seen at such a drama in masquerade.
-
-[216] "_Johnson._ I am of opinion that more influence has been
-ascribed to the _Beggars' Opera_ than it in reality ever had; for I
-do not believe that any man was ever made a rogue by being present at
-its representation. At the same time, I do not deny that it may have
-some influence, by making the character of a rogue familiar, and in
-some degree pleasing." Then collecting himself, as it were to give a
-heavy stroke; "There is in it such a labefaction of all principles,
-as may be injurious to morality."--Boswell's _Johnson_.
-
-[217] A very eminent physician, whose discernment is as acute and
-penetrating in judging of the human character as it is in his own
-profession, remarked once at a club where I was, that a lively young
-man would hardly resist a solicitation from his mistress to go upon
-the highway, immediately after being present at the _Beggars' Opera_.
-I have been told of an ingenious observation by Mr. Gibbon, that "the
-_Beggars' Opera_ may perhaps have sometimes increased the number of
-highwaymen, but that it has had a beneficial effect in refining that
-class of men, making them less ferocious, more polite, in short,
-more like gentlemen." Upon this Mr. Courtenay said, that Gay was the
-Orpheus of highwaymen.--Note upon Boswell's _Johnson_, vol. i. p. 488.
-
-[218] Glory be to great Apollo! At that auspicious period his lyre
-should have been new strung, and exalted in Britain; for her nobles
-were as much interested in the disputes between a trio of Italian
-singers, as they now are in those on which depends the salvation of
-the empire.
-
-[219] The Ridiculous Travellers returned to Italy.
-
-An Italian I was once talking with upon this crotchet contest,
-concluded an harangue, calculated to throw Gay's talents and taste
-into ridicule, with "Saire, this simple signor did tri to pelt mine
-countrymen out of England with _Lumps of Pudding_," another of the
-_Beggars' Opera_ tunes.
-
-[220] Doctor Arbuthnot, describing the declining state of operas (in
-a letter printed in the _Daily Journal_), says, "I take the _Beggars'
-Opera_ to be the touchstone to try British taste on, and it has
-accordingly proved effectual in discovering our true inclinations,
-which, how artfully soever they may be disguised by a childish
-fondness for Italian poetry and music, in preference to our own,
-will, in one way or other, start up and disclose themselves."
-
-[221] In the _London Chronicle_ for April 6, 1762, is the following
-paragraph: "On Friday last, at the sale of the late Mr. Rich's
-pictures, jewels, etc., a clock by Graham was bought by the Right
-Honourable the Earl of Chesterfield for £42; and a scene in the
-_Beggars' Opera_, where Lucy and Polly are pleading for Macheath,
-painted by Hogarth, was sold for £32, 14s. to his Grace the Duke of
-Leeds. The money arising from the whole sale amounted to £683, 14s."
-
-[222] The name of that right cunning workman, Filch, is not
-introduced in the description of the outline; by an edition of the
-opera, published in 1729, I find he was personated by a Mr. Clark.
-
-[223] The part of this hero of the highway being originally cast for
-Quin, intimates the style in which it was thought characteristic to
-play it. Walker was praised for performing it with dignity!
-
-[224] In this are several portraits; one of Sir Francis Page of
-severe memory, with a halter round his neck--
-
- "Hard words or hanging, if your judge be Page."
-
-
-[225] In this, as in almost all his dedications, the poet is very
-lavish of his panegyric. Thus does it begin:--
-
-"MAY IT PLEASE YOUR GRACE,--The favour which heroic plays have lately
-found upon our theatres, has been wholly derived to them from the
-countenance and approbation they have received at Court. The most
-eminent persons for wit and honour in the royal circle having so far
-owned them, that they have judged no way so fit as verse to entertain
-a noble audience or to express a noble passion. And among the rest
-which have been written in this kind, they have been so indulgent to
-this poem, as to allow it no inconsiderable place. Since, therefore,
-to the Court I owe its fortune on the stage; so, being now more
-publicly exposed in print, I humbly recommend it to your Grace's
-protection, who by all knowing persons is esteemed a principal
-ornament of the Court. But though the rank which you hold in the
-royal family might direct the eyes of a poet to you, yet your beauty
-and goodness detain and fix them," etc. etc. etc.
-
-In the fourth act is the line about which Dryden has been so
-unmercifully laughed at, and which I have invariably seen quoted:
-
- "I follow fate, which does too fast pursue."
-
-This might be, and has been defended, by supposing that the race was
-run in a circle; but the line in a song, warbled by an Indian woman
-at the side of a fountain, is as follows:--
-
- "Ah, fading joy, how quickly art thou past!
- Yet we thy ruin haste:
- As if the cares of human life were few,
- We seek out new,
- And follow fate, which would too fast pursue," etc.
-
-
-[226] The following was given to me by a collector of dramatic
-curiosities, who in the course of a long life has raked together
-as many quires of ancient and modern play-bills as would cover
-every dead wall in the metropolis, and I am assured that of the
-above-mentioned handbill it is
-
- A TRUE COPY.
-
- "Connection of the _Indian Emperor_ to the _Indian Queen_.
-
- "The conclusion of the _Indian Emperor_ (part of which poem was
- written by me) left little matter for another story to be built
- on, there remaining but two of the considerable characters alive,
- viz. Montezuma and Orazia: thereupon the author of this thought it
- necessary to produce new persons from the old ones; and considering
- the late Indian Queen, before she loved Montezuma, lived in
- clandestine marriage with her great general Traxalla, from those
- two he has raised a son and two daughters, supposed to be grown up
- to man and woman's estate, and their mother Orazia (for whom there
- was no further use in the story) lately dead. So that you are to
- imagine about twenty years elapsed since the coronation of Montezuma,
- who in the truth of the history was a great and glorious prince,
- and in whose time happened the discovery and invasion of Mexico
- by the Spaniards (under the command of Cortez), who joined with
- the Traxallan Indians, the inveterate enemies of Montezuma, wholly
- subverted that flourishing empire, the conquest of which is the
- subject of this dramatic poem.
-
- "I have neither wholly followed the story, nor varied from it, and,
- as near as I could, have traced the native simplicity and ignorance
- of the Indians in relation to European customs: the shipping, armour,
- horses, swords, and guns of the Spaniards, being as new to them as
- their habits and manners were to the Christians.
-
- "The difference of their religion from ours, I have taken from the
- story itself; and that which you find of it in the first and fifth
- acts, touching the sufferings and constancy of Montezuma in his
- opinions, I have only illustrated, not altered from those who have
- written of it.
-
- "JOHN DRYDEN."
-
-
-[227] Some eighteen or twenty years ago, a person of quality in
-the neighbourhood of Lichfield, dragged together a shoal of little
-holiday fry, to give an infantine exhibition of a new sentimental
-comedy.
-
-A spacious Gothic gallery made an admirable theatre, and for
-scenery--there was an excellent substitute, in many a mouldering
-breadth of ancient tapestry, which represented in horrid guise the
-direful tale of Herod's Cruelty. By the hour announced for the
-theatrical _début_ of these unfledged actors, the house overflowed.
-Though the circumstance is not recorded by either Boswell or Sir
-John Hawkins, a late celebrated moralist was one of the audience.
-To the beginning of the fifth act he stayed with more patience than
-could have been expected; at this time he exhibited evident marks of
-_ennui_ and lassitude--yawned three times, and attempted to make his
-exit. The lady of the mansion cut off his retreat with, "'Pon honour,
-Doctor Johnson, you must not go! How can you think of leaving the
-theatre when my Dicky is in so interesting a situation?" "Madam,"
-replied the sage, "with the plot of your play I was unacquainted, and
-have waited thus long in the hope that it would turn out a tragedy;
-I might then have seen how naturally little Dicky and his dramatic
-associates would have died! I now perceive that the author will
-neither introduce aconite nor a bare bodkin, and have no prospect of
-a pathetic termination but in Herod or some of his tapestry hang-dogs
-starting into life. Should these murderous ruffians once step upon
-the stage, all your pretty innocents will most assuredly be put to
-the sword!"
-
-[228] In the third volume of this work, which was compiled from
-Hogarth's manuscripts, and published some time after the two which
-precede it, there is a catalogue of all his prints, and the editor
-has endeavoured to add a more perfect list of the numerous variations
-than has been hitherto given to the public.
-
-[229] In a marginal leaf of the late Doctor Lort's _Trusler_, I
-found a piece of a newspaper with the following remarks (neither
-the date nor title of the paper were inserted): "Whether the late
-extraordinary sums paid for the works of Hogarth at Mr. Gulston's
-sale are to be regarded on the whole as proofs of our artist's merit,
-or of extravagance in our modern collectors, I shall not venture to
-determine; and yet the following statement of the rapid advance in
-the value of prints from this celebrated master may furnish notices
-to assist the judgment of your readers:--
-
-"In 1780, Mr. Walpole obliged the world with a fourth volume of his
-_Anecdotes of Painting in England_. In this entertaining performance
-was comprised the first catalogue of Hogarth's pieces. I say the
-first, for every preceding enumeration of them was defective in
-the extreme. This was succeeded in 1781 by a publication from the
-ingenious and accurate Mr. Nichols, who considerably enlarged and
-amended the list made by his predecessor.
-
-"In the same year, Mr. Bailley's collection, which would now be
-deemed an imperfect one, was sold at Christie's for £61, 10s. In 1782
-it was resold, with some additions, at Barford's for £105.
-
-"In 1785, the late Mr. Henderson of Covent Garden Theatre disposed of
-his collection, by far less complete than either of the foregoing,
-for £126.
-
-"In 1786, Mr. Gulston's was sold piecemeal by Mr. Greenwood; and
-though the condition of all such articles in it, as real taste and
-common sense would style the most valuable, were very indifferent,
-the whole series is reported to have brought in upwards of £600.[230]
-At this auction, the plates now to be particularized were knocked
-down at the following rates, though taken altogether they were scarce
-worth the money paid for the cheapest of them:--
-
- Two engravings on plate £4 14 6
- Three ditto 3 10 0
- Small arms of the Duchess of Kendal 4 0 0
- Large ditto 6 0 0
- Arms of Lord Aylmer 7 10 0
- Arms unknown, with women as terms 6 10 0
- Two ditto 1 11 6
- Impression from a tankard 10 0 0
- Hogarth's shop-bill and another 11 15 0
- Rape of the Lock; impression from a gold snuff-box
- presented to Mr. Pope 33 0 0
- Scene of Evening, without the girl 40 8 6
-
-"Should the celebrity of the delightful mock heroic poem, or the
-rareness of an imperfect play tending to show that a complete design
-is not always to be hit at once even by a Hogarth, furnish some
-apology for the purchase of the two last articles, what excuse can be
-invented for the collectors who bought the preceding trash on terms
-so ridiculously high? Of all the trifling works of art, coats of
-arms must be reckoned the most contemptible. These early productions
-of our author on silver tea-tables, mugs, and waiters, have no sort
-of merit to recommend them, nor were ever meant to be impressed on
-paper (except as in momentary satisfaction to the engraver); for
-being there reversed, like the prayers of witches, they must be read
-backwards. Besides, what taste or genius can be manifested in the
-disposition of a cat's whiskers or a fox's tail; in the emblazonry of
-a black swan with two necks, or a blue boar with gilded tail? What
-abilities are requisite for the expansion of an old woman's furred
-cloak (very pompously denominated a mantle) at the back of a shield,
-or for inscribing some bright sentence or wretched pun (yclep'd a
-motto) in Gothic Latin on a ribbon fantastically waved? For the
-design in which nature and manners are displayed, no praise can be
-too exalted; but as for his heraldry,--his representation of birds
-and beasts that never had existence,--
-
- "A dragon, and a finless fish,
- A clip-wing'd griffin, and a molten raven,
- And such a deal of skimble-skamble stuff,"--
-
-these can never be allowed to contribute a single leaf to the chaplet
-he has so long and so deservedly worn.
-
-"I have dwelt the more on these things, because I am assured there
-are print-dealers now rummaging the books of our oldest engravers,
-in the hope that a still greater number of useless and insignificant
-particulars consisting of arms, etc., imputable to Hogarth, will
-be found; nor are their hopes less sanguine that the madness of
-collectors will be confirmed instead of cured by the examples hung
-out at the late auction in Leicester Fields.
-
-"Let me hope, however, that for the future every sensible collector
-will think his assemblage of Hogarth's prints sufficiently complete,
-without the foolish adjuncts already described and reprobated. For
-the authenticity of these trifles being obvious to no kind of proof,
-they principally tend to expose their purchasers to the frauds of
-designing people, who will laugh at their credulity while they pocket
-their cash."
-
-[230] A short time before this, the writer of these volumes had the
-honour of furnishing his Royal Highness the Prince of Wales with a
-set of Hogarth's works. They consisted of remarkably fine impressions
-from his most valuable plates, many of the variations, and some which
-were deemed scarce (though not one of either the large or small coat
-of arms). For the two volumes he charged and received £84.
-
-[231] See the manner of disgracing the most serious subjects in many
-celebrated old pictures, by introducing low, absurd, and obscure, and
-often profane, circumstances into them.
-
-[232]
-
- "What shall withstand old Time's devouring hand?
- Where's Troy? and where's the Maypole in the Strand?"
-
-
-[233] I may be told that this is a mistake, and that it was either to
-Pope or Swift. It was the fate of Arbuthnot to twine laurel for the
-brows of his friends. I know it was a partnership account, but surely
-the Doctor was first in the firm.
-
-[234] See the introduction to the _Memoirs of Scriblerus_.
-
-[235] Should any Lord, Knight, Esquire, or spirited Bookseller,
-choose to purchase the whole copy, I am ready to treat with him upon
-proper terms.
-
-[236] The writer of a modern book of travels, relating the
-particulars of his being cast away, thus concludeth: "After having
-walked eleven hours without tracing the print of a human foot, to
-my great comfort and delight I saw a man hanging upon a gibbet:
-my pleasure at this cheering prospect was inexpressible, for it
-convinced me that I was in a civilised country!"
-
-
-
-
- * * * * *
-
-
-
-
- _SEASON 1874._
-
-[Illustration]
-
-
-A LIST OF BOOKS
-
-PUBLISHED BY
-
-CHATTO & WINDUS
-
-(_Successors to John Camden Hotten_),
-
-74 & 75, PICCADILLY, LONDON, W.
-
-
-THE FAMOUS FRASER PORTRAITS.
-
-MACLISE'S GALLERY OF ILLUSTRIOUS LITERARY CHARACTERS.
-
-With Notes by the late WILLIAM MAGINN, LL.D.
-
-Edited, with copious Notes, by WILLIAM BATES, B.A., Professor of
-Classics in Queen's College, Birmingham. The volume contains the
-whole 83 SPLENDID AND MOST CHARACTERISTIC PORTRAITS, now first issued
-in a complete form. In demy 4to, over 400 pages, cloth gilt and gilt
-edges, 31_s._ 6_d._; or, in morocco elegant, 70_s._
-
- "What a truly charming book of pictures and prose, the
- quintessence, as it were, of Maclise and Maginn, giving the very
- form and pressure of their literary time, would this century of
- illustrious characters make."--_Notes and Queries._
-
-
-[Illustration]
-
-THE PRINCE OF CARICATURISTS.
-
-THE WORKS OF JAMES GILLRAY,
-
-_The Caricaturist_,
-
-With the Story of his Life and Times, and full and Anecdotal
-Descriptions of his Engravings.
-
-Edited by THOS. WRIGHT, Esq., M.A., F.S.A.
-
-Illustrated with 90 full-page Plates, and about 400 Wood Engravings.
-Demy 4to, 600 pages, cloth extra, 31_s._ 6_d._; or, in morocco
-elegant, 70_s._
-
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-BEAUTIFUL PICTURES BY BRITISH ARTISTS.
-
-A Gathering of Favourites from our Picture Galleries, 1800-1870. By
-WILKIE, CONSTABLE, J. M. W. TURNER, MULREADY, Sir EDWIN LANDSEER,
-MACLISE, LESLIE, E. M. WARD, FRITH, Sir JOHN GILBERT, ANSDELL, MARCUS
-STONE, Sir NOEL PATON, EYRE CROWE, FAED, MADOX BROWN. All Engraved
-in the highest style of Art. With Notices of the Artists by SYDNEY
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-
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-
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-LELY. Engraved in the highest style of Art by THOMSON, WRIGHT,
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-or, in morocco elegant, 65_s._
-
- "This truly beautiful and splendid production is equally a gem
- among the Fine Arts and in Literature."--_Quarterly Review._
-
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-COMPANION TO THE "HISTORY OF SIGNBOARDS."
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-Amusing Anecdotes and Examples of Successful Advertisers. Crown 8vo,
-with numerous Illustrations, coloured and plain, cloth extra, 7_s._
-6_d._
-
- [_In preparation._
-
-
-ARE YOU ENGAGED? IF SO, GET
-
-[Illustration]
-
-=Advice to Parties About to Marry.= A Series of Instructions in Jest
-and Earnest. By the Hon. HUGH ROWLEY. With Humorous Illustrations.
-Price 3_s._ 6_d._, elegantly bound, and enclosed in tinted wrapper,
-beautifully scented by RIMMEL.
-
- *** _Before taking the "awful plunge" be sure to consult this
- little work. If it is not a guarantee against life-long misery,
- it will at least be found of great assistance in selecting a
- partner for life._
-
-
-=American Happy Thoughts.= The finest collection of American Humour
-ever made. Foolscap 8vo, illustrated covers, 1_s._
-
- [_Preparing._
-
-
-[Illustration]
-
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-Translated by THOMAS MOORE. Bound in vellum cloth and Etruscan gold,
-12_s._ 6_d._
-
- *** _A beautiful and captivating volume. The well-known Paris
- house, Firmin Didot, a few years since produced a miniature
- edition of these exquisite designs by photography, and sold a
- large number at £2 per copy. The Designs have been universally
- admired by both artists and poets._
-
-
-=Armorial Register of the Order of the Garter=, from Edward III. to
-the Present Time. The several Shields beautifully emblazoned in Gold
-and Colours from the Original Stall Plates in St. George's Chapel,
-Windsor. All emblazoned by hand. A sumptuous volume, bound in crimson
-morocco, gilt, £20.
-
-
-ARTEMUS WARD'S WORKS.
-
-[Illustration]
-
-=Artemus Ward, Complete.= The Works of CHARLES FARRER BROWNE, better
-known as "ARTEMUS WARD," now first collected. Crown 8vo, with fine
-Portrait, facsimile of handwriting, &c., 540 pages, cloth neat, 7_s._
-6_d._
-
- *** _Comprises all that the humourist has written in England or
- America. Admirers of Artemus Ward will be glad to possess his
- writings in a complete form._
-
-
-=Artemus Ward's Lecture at the Egyptian Hall=, with the Panorama.
-Edited by the late T. W. ROBERTSON, Author of "Caste," &c., and E. P.
-HINGSTON. Small 4to, exquisitely printed, bound in green and gold,
-with NUMEROUS TINTED ILLUSTRATIONS, 6_s._
-
-
-=Artemus Ward: his Book.= With Notes and Introduction by the Editor
-of the "Biglow Papers." One of the wittiest books published for many
-years. Fcap. 8vo, illustrated cover, 1_s._
-
- The _Saturday Review_ says:--"The author combines the powers of
- Thackeray with those of Albert Smith. The salt is rubbed in by a
- native hand--one which has the gift of tickling."
-
-
-=Artemus Ward: his Travels among the Mormons and on the Rampage.=
-Edited by E. P. HINGSTON, the Agent and Companion of A. WARD whilst
-"on the Rampage." New Edition, price 1_s._
-
- *** _Some of Artemus's most mirth-provoking papers are to be
- found in this book. The chapters on the Mormons will unbend the
- sternest countenance. As bits of fun they are_ IMMENSE!
-
-
-=Artemus Ward's Letters to "Punch,"= Among the Witches, and other
-Sketches. Cheap Popular Edition. Fcap. 8vo, in illustrated cover,
-1_s._; or, 16mo, bound in cloth extra, 2_s._
-
- *** _The volume contains, in addition, some quaint and humorous
- compositions which were found upon the author's table after his
- decease._
-
-
-=Artemus Ward among the Fenians:= with the Showman's Experiences of
-Life at Washington, and Military Ardour at Baldinsville. Toned paper,
-price 6_d._
-
-
-=Army Lists of the Roundheads and Cavaliers in the Civil War, 1642.=
-Second Edition, considerably Enlarged and Corrected. Edited, with
-Notes, by EDWARD PEACOCK, F.S.A. 4to, half-Roxburghe, 7_s._ 6_d._
-
- *** _Very interesting to Antiquaries and Genealogists._
-
-
-[Illustration]
-
-=The Art of Amusing.= A Collection of Graceful Arts, Games, Tricks,
-Puzzles, and Charades, intended to amuse everybody, and enable all to
-amuse everybody else. By FRANK BELLEW. With nearly 300 Illustrations.
-Crown 8vo, 4_s._ 6_d._
-
- *** _One of the most entertaining handbooks of amusements ever
- published._
-
-
-=Awful Crammers.= A New American Joke Book. Edited by TITUS A.
-BRICK, Author of "Shaving Them." Fcap. 8vo, with numerous curious
-Illustrations, 1_s._
-
-A FINE EDITION is also published, in crown 8vo, printed on toned
-paper, and bound in cloth gilt, at 3_s._ 6_d._
-
- "Rarer than the phœnix is the virtuous man who will consent to
- lose a good anecdote because it isn't true."--DE QUINCY.
-
-
-[Illustration]
-
-=Babies and Ladders=: Essays on Things in General. By EMMANUEL KINK.
-A New Work of Irresistible Humour (not American), which has excited
-considerable attention. Fcap. 8vo, with numerous Vignettes by W. S.
-GILBERT and others, 1_s._
-
-
-=Bayard Taylor's Diversions of the Echo Club.= A Delightful Volume of
-Refined Literary Humour. In 16mo, paper cover, with Portrait of the
-Author, 1_s._ 6_d._; cloth extra, 2_s._
-
-
-[Illustration]
-
-UNIFORM WITH MR. RUSKIN'S EDITION OF "GRIMM."
-
-=Bechstein's As Pretty as Seven=, and other Popular German Stories.
-Collected by LUDWIG BECHSTEIN. With Additional Tales by the Brothers
-GRIMM. 100 Illustrations by RICHTER. Small 4to, green and gold, 6_s._
-6_d._; gilt edges, 7_s._ 6_d._
-
- *** _One of the most delightful books for children ever
- published. It is, in every way, a Companion to the German Stories
- of the Brothers Grimm, and the tales are equally pure and
- healthful. The quaint simplicity of Richter's engravings will
- charm every lover of legendary lore._
-
-
-=The Biglow Papers.= By JAMES RUSSELL LOWELL. The Best Edition, with
-full Glossary, of these extraordinary Verses. Fcap. 8vo, illustrated
-cover, 1_s._
-
-
-[Illustration]
-
-UNIFORM WITH OUR "RABELAIS."
-
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-Introduction by THOMAS WRIGHT, F.S.A. Crown 8vo, with the BEAUTIFUL
-ENGRAVINGS by STOTHARD which adorned Pickering's fine Edition,
-published at £2 12_s._ 6_d._ This New Edition is only 7_s._ 6_d._
-
- *** _A faithful translation, in which are restored many passages
- omitted in former Editions._
-
-
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-Silversmith. By ALFRED LUTSCHAUNIG, Manager of the Liverpool Assay
-Office. Crown 8vo, with 46 Plates of the Hall-Marks of the different
-Assay Towns of the United Kingdom, as now stamped on Plate and
-Jewellery, 7_s._ 6_d._
-
- *** _This work gives practical methods for testing the quality of
- gold and silver. It was compiled by the author for his own use,
- and as a Supplement to "Chaffers."_
-
-
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-Provinces, the History of their Rise and Progress, and descriptions
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-over 500 pages, with frontispiece and numerous Portraits and
-Illustrations, cloth extra, 7_s._ 6_d._
-
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- were well exchanged against the tenth part of one good History of
- Booksellers."--THOMAS CARLYLE.
-
-
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-Moral, and Panegyrical. Edited by the Rev. JOHN BOOTH, B.A. A New
-Edition. Pott 8vo, cloth gilt, 6_s._
-
-
-[Illustration: "Is our civilization a failure, or is the Caucasian
-played out?"]
-
-BRET HARTE'S WORKS.
-
-_Widely known for their Exquisite Pathos and Delightful Humour._
-
-
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-Author, and 50 Illustrations. Crown 8vo, 650 pages, cloth extra,
-7_s._ 6_d._
-
-
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-illustrated cover, 1_s._
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-
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-8vo, illustrated cover, 1_s._ 6_d._
-
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-cover, 1_s._ 6_d._
-
- *** _A most enjoyable book, only surpassed, in its special class,
- by Thackeray's Burlesque Novels._
-
-
-=Bret Harte's Lothaw=; or, The Adventures of a Young Gentleman in
-Search of a Religion. By Mr. BENJAMINS (_Bret Harte_). Price 6_d._
-Curiously Illustrated.
-
-
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-BUCKSTONE. Crown 8vo, 500 pp., 7_s._ 6_d._
-
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- ability could, at the present day, make the fortune of any one of
- our so-called "comic journals," and bankrupt the rest._
-
-
-NEW BOOK FOR BOYS.
-
-[Illustration]
-
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-the Earliest Times to the Present Day. By HENRY SIEBE. Profusely
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-8vo, cloth gilt, a very thick volume, price 7_s._ 6_d._
-
-[Illustration]
-
-
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-7_s._ 6_d._
-
-[Illustration]
-
- *** _The two volumes (each sold separately) form a most
- extraordinary gathering of the best wit and humour of the past
- half-century. The work forms a "Comic History of England" for
- twenty years._
-
-
-THE BEST GUIDE TO HERALDRY.
-
-[Illustration]
-
-=Cussans' Handbook of Heraldry=; with Instructions for Tracing
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-emblazoned, 7_s._ 6_d._
-
- *** _This volume, beautifully printed on toned paper, contains
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- science of Armory, but several other subjects hitherto unnoticed.
- Amongst these may be mentioned_:--1. DIRECTIONS FOR TRACING
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- AND FACSIMILES. 3. THE APPOINTMENT OF LIVERIES. 4. CONTINENTAL
- AND AMERICAN HERALDRY, &c.
-
-
-VERY IMPORTANT COUNTY HISTORY.
-
-[Illustration]
-
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-a very superior manner, and ranging with the finest works of its
-class. Illustrated with full-page Plates on Copper and Stone, and a
-profusion of small Woodcuts. Parts I. to VI. are now ready, price
-21_s._ each.
-
- *** _An entirely new History of this important County, great
- attention being given to all matters pertaining to the Family
- History of the locality._
-
-
-UNIFORM WITH THE "CHARLES DICKENS EDITION."
-
-[Illustration]
-
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-
- "Anecdotes seem to have poured in upon the author from all
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- something worth reading is sure to meet the eye."--_The Standard._
-
-
-Also Published:
-
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-
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- Times._
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-
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-
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-[Illustration]
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-[Illustration]
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-[Illustration]
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-[Illustration]
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-[Illustration]
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-[Illustration]
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-[Illustration]
-
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-[Illustration]
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-[Illustration]
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-[Illustration]
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-[Illustration]
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-[Illustration: SHELLEY, FROM THE GODWIN SKETCH.]
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-[Illustration: BULL AND MOUTH.]
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-[Illustration]
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-[Illustration]
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-[Illustration]
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-[Illustration: THEODORE HOOK'S HOUSE, NEAR PUTNEY.]
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-[Illustration]
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-[Illustration: THE SUBSCRIPTION ROOM AT BROOKES'S.]
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-
-<pre>
-
-The Project Gutenberg EBook of Hogarth's Works, Volume 2 (of 3), by
-John Ireland and John Nichols
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most
-other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
-whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms of
-the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at
-www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you'll have
-to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook.
-
-Title: Hogarth's Works, Volume 2 (of 3)
- With life and anecdotal descriptions of his pictures
-
-Author: John Ireland
- John Nichols
-
-Release Date: May 3, 2016 [EBook #51978]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: UTF-8
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK HOGARTH'S WORKS, VOLUME 2 (OF 3) ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by Chris Curnow, John Campbell and the Online
-Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This
-file was produced from images generously made available
-by The Internet Archive)
-
-
-
-
-
-
-</pre>
-
-
-
-<div class="transnote">
-<p><strong>TRANSCRIBER'S NOTE</strong></p>
-
-<p>Obvious typographical errors and punctuation errors have been
-corrected after careful comparison with other occurrences within
-the text and consultation of external sources.</p>
-
-<p>Footnotes have been moved to the end of the book text, and before
-the publisher's Book Catalog. Some Footnotes are very long.</p>
-
-<p class="screenonly">To avoid duplication, the page numbering in the publisher's Book
-Catalog at the back of the book has a suffix C added, so that for
-example page [23] in the Catalog is denoted as [23C].</p>
-
-<p>The 3-star asterism symbol in the Catalog is denoted by ⁂. On
-some handheld devices it may display as a space.</p>
-
-<p class="customcover">The cover was created by the transcriber and is placed
-in the public domain.</p>
-
-<p>More detail can be found at the <a href="#TN">end of the book</a>.</p>
-</div>
-
-
-
-<hr class="chap pg-brk" />
-
-<p class="p6" />
-<h1>HOGARTH'S WORKS:<br />
-
-<span class="xs">WITH</span><br />
-
-<span class="medium"><em>LIFE AND ANECDOTAL DESCRIPTIONS OF HIS PICTURES.</em></span><br />
-
-<span class="xl">&mdash;</span><span class="small">◆</span><span class="xl">&mdash;</span><br />
-
-<span class="medium">SECOND SERIES.</span></h1>
-<p class="p4" />
-
-
-<hr class="chap pg-brk" />
-
-<p class="p2" />
-<div class="figcenter">
-<a name="FP" id="FP"></a>
-<img src="images/i_frontis.jpg" alt="" />
-<div class="caption">MARRIAGE A LA MODE. PLATE I.</div>
-</div>
-
-
-<hr class="chap pg-brk" />
-
-<div>
-<p class="pfs180 lsp">
-HOGARTH'S WORKS:</p>
-<br />
-<p class="pfs70">WITH</p>
-<br />
-<p class="pfs120"><em>LIFE AND ANECDOTAL DESCRIPTIONS OF HIS PICTURES</em>.</p>
-<br />
-<p class="pfs80">BY</p>
-<br />
-<p class="pfs100"><span class="smcap">JOHN IRELAND and JOHN NICHOLS, F.S.A.</span></p>
-
-<div class="figcenter"><br />
-<img src="images/colophon-150.jpg" alt="" /><br />
-</div>
-
-<p class="pfs90"><em>THE WHOLE OF THE PLATES REDUCED IN EXACT<br />
-FAC-SIMILE OF THE ORIGINALS.</em></p>
-<br />
-<p class="pfs100 lsp">Second Series.</p>
-<br />
-<p class="pfs100 antiqua lsp">London:</p>
-<p class="pfs120">CHATTO AND WINDUS, PUBLISHERS.</p>
-<p class="pfs70">(<em>SUCCESSORS TO JOHN CAMDEN HOTTEN.</em>)</p>
-</div>
-
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_v" id="Page_v">[Pg v]</a></span></p>
-
-<h2><span class="large">LIST OF PLATES</span></h2>
-
-<p class="pfs100">DESCRIBED IN THE SECOND SERIES.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<img src="images/sep.jpg" alt="" />
-</div>
-
-<div class="center fs90">
-<table border="0" cellpadding="4" cellspacing="4" width="95%" summary="List of Plates">
-<tr><td class="tdl"></td><td class="tdr xs">PAGE</td></tr>
-<tr><td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">Marriage a la Mode&mdash;</span></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="tdl pad4"><span class="smcap">Plate I.</span> The Marriage Settlement,</td><td class="tdr wd15"><em><a href="#FP">Frontispiece</a></em></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="tdl pad4"><span class="smcap">Plate II.</span> The Viscount and his Lady at Home,</td><td class="tdr"><a href="#MM_II">24</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="tdl pad4"><span class="smcap">Plate III.</span> The Viscount's Visit to the Quack Doctor,</td><td class="tdr"><a href="#MM_III">28</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="tdl pad4"><span class="smcap">Plate IV.</span> The Countess's Morning Levee,</td><td class="tdr"><a href="#MM_IV">36</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="tdl pad4"><span class="smcap">Plate V.</span> The Husband killed in a Bagnio,</td><td class="tdr"><a href="#MM_V">40</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="tdl pad4"><span class="smcap">Plate VI.</span> Death of the Countess,</td><td class="tdr"><a href="#MM_VI">44</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">First Stage of Cruelty,</span></td><td class="tdr"><a href="#SC_I">54</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">Second Stage of Cruelty,</span></td><td class="tdr"><a href="#SC_II">56</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">Cruelty in Perfection,</span></td><td class="tdr"><a href="#SC_III">58</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">The Reward of Cruelty,</span></td><td class="tdr"><a href="#SC_IV">62</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">Beer Street,</span></td><td class="tdr"><a href="#BS">66</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">Gin Lane,</span></td><td class="tdr"><a href="#GL">68</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">Paul before Felix</span> (Burlesqued),</td><td class="tdr"><a href="#PF">74</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">Paul Preaching before Felix,</span></td><td class="tdr"><a href="#PP_I">76</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">The Same&mdash;Another Engraving,</span></td><td class="tdr"><a href="#PP_II">78</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="tdl"><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_vi" id="Page_vi">[vi]</a></span>
- <span class="smcap">Moses and Pharaoh's Daughter,</span></td><td class="tdr"><a href="#MP">82</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">Four Prints of an Election&mdash;</span></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="tdl pad4"><span class="smcap">Plate I.</span> The Entertainment,</td><td class="tdr"><a href="#EL_I">88</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="tdl pad4"><span class="smcap">Plate II.</span> Canvassing for Votes,</td><td class="tdr"><a href="#EL_II">98</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="tdl pad4"><span class="smcap">Plate III.</span> The Polling,</td><td class="tdr"><a href="#EL_III">106</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="tdl pad4"><span class="smcap">Plate IV.</span> Chairing the Member,</td><td class="tdr"><a href="#EL_IV">112</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">The March to Finchley,</span></td><td class="tdr"><a href="#MF">122</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">The Invasion&mdash;</span></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="tdl pad4"><span class="smcap">Plate I.</span> France,</td><td class="tdr"><a href="#FE_I">140</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="tdl pad4"><span class="smcap">Plate II.</span> England,</td><td class="tdr"><a href="#FE_II">142</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">The Cockpit,</span></td><td class="tdr"><a href="#CP">146</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">Credulity, Superstition, and Fanaticism,</span></td><td class="tdr"><a href="#CS">160</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">The Times&mdash;</span></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="tdl pad4"><span class="smcap">Plate I.,</span></td><td class="tdr"><a href="#TT_I">180</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="tdl pad4"><span class="smcap">Plate II.,</span></td><td class="tdr"><a href="#TT_II">208</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">John Wilkes, Esq.,</span></td><td class="tdr"><a href="#JW">222</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">The Rev. C. Churchill,</span></td><td class="tdr"><a href="#CC">228</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">Boys Peeping at Nature</span> (2 Plates),</td><td class="tdr"><a href="#BP">244</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">The Laughing Audience,</span></td><td class="tdr"><a href="#LA">246</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">The Lecture,</span></td><td class="tdr"><a href="#LE">250</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">The Orchestra,</span></td><td class="tdr"><a href="#OR">254</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">The Company of Undertakers,</span></td><td class="tdr"><a href="#CU">258</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">Character and Caricature,</span></td><td class="tdr"><a href="#DI">266</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="tdl"><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_vii" id="Page_vii">[vii]</a></span>
- <span class="smcap">Sarah Malcolm,</span></td><td class="tdr"><a href="#SM">268</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">Columbus Breaking the Egg,</span></td><td class="tdr"><a href="#CO">276</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">The Five Orders of Periwigs,</span></td><td class="tdr"><a href="#PE">284</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">The Bench,</span></td><td class="tdr"><a href="#BE">290</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">The Beggars' Opera,</span></td><td class="tdr"><a href="#BO">292</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">The Indian Emperor,</span></td><td class="tdr"><a href="#CM">300</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">The Bathos,</span></td><td class="tdr"><a href="#BA">312</a></td></tr>
-</table></div>
-
-<p class="p4" />
-<div class="figcenter">
-<img src="images/end_vii.jpg" alt="" />
-</div>
-
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_1" id="Page_1">[Pg 1]</a></span></p>
-
-<h2>HOGARTH ILLUSTRATED.</h2>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<img src="images/sep.jpg" alt="" />
-</div>
-
-<h3>MARRIAGE A LA MODE.</h3>
-
-<p class="pfs80">"'Tis from high life our characters are drawn."</p>
-
-<div>
-<img class="drop-cap" src="images/dc_001.jpg" alt="" />
-</div>
-
-<p class="drop-cap">In his preceding prints Mr. Hogarth generally
-pointed his satire at persons in a
-subordinate situation, and took his examples
-from the inferior ranks of society. From the
-situation of his characters, and the minute precision
-with which he displayed the scenes he professed to
-delineate, we sometimes see little violations of that
-decorum which is perhaps necessary in engravings
-professedly designed for furniture. For this neglect
-of delicacy some of his prints were censured; to
-remove all apprehensions of this series being liable
-to the same objections, they were thus announced
-in the <cite>London Daily Post</cite> of April 7, 1743:&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>"Mr. Hogarth intends to publish, by subscription,
-six prints from copperplates, engraved by the best
-masters in Paris after his own paintings; the heads,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_2" id="Page_2">[2]</a></span>
-for the better preservation of the characters and
-expressions, to be done by the author, representing
-a variety of modern occurrences in high life, and
-called 'Marriage à la Mode.'</p>
-
-<p>"Particular care is taken that the whole work shall
-not be liable to exception, on account of any indecency
-or inelegancy; and that none of the characters
-represented shall be personal, etc."</p></div>
-
-<p>The artist has adhered to his engagement: he has
-struck at an higher order, and displayed the follies
-and vices which frequently degrade our nobility. He
-has exhibited the prospect of a fashionable marriage,
-where the gentleman is attracted by riches, and the
-lady by ambition. That misery and destruction
-succeeded an union founded upon such principles is
-not to be wondered at; the progress of that misery,
-and the final destruction of the actors, is so delineated
-as to form a regular and well-divided tragedy. In
-the first act are represented five principal characters;
-and three of them, by a regular chain of incidents
-naturally flowing from each other, fall victims to
-their own vices. The young nobleman, for attempting
-to revenge the violation of his wife's virtue, which
-he never cherished, is killed by her paramour, who
-for this murder suffers an ignominious death; and the
-lady, distracted at the reflection of having been the
-cause of their lives terminating in so horrid a manner,
-makes her own quietus with a dose of laudanum.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_3" id="Page_3">[3]</a></span>
-This is painting to the understanding, appealing to
-the heart, and making the pencil an advocate in the
-cause of morality. It is doing that poetical justice
-which our dramatists have sometimes neglected, and
-in which they have perhaps been justified by the
-common events of human life; for it must be acknowledged,
-that while virtue is frequently unfortunate, we
-often see vice successful. Notwithstanding this, those
-pictures are surely best calculated to encourage men
-in the practice of the social duties which display
-the evils consequent upon their violation. Whatever
-poetical justice may allow, morality demands that
-some examples should be held up to prove "that
-the omission of a duty frequently leads to the perpetration
-of a crime; and that crimes of so black a
-dye as are here represented, almost invariably terminate
-in wretchedness, infamy, and death."</p>
-
-<p>The original pictures were, on the 6th of June 1750,
-purchased by Mr. Lane of Hillingdon, near Uxbridge,
-for one hundred and twenty guineas!&mdash;a price so inadequate
-to their merit, and to what it might have
-been fairly presumed they would have produced even
-at that time, that it becomes difficult to account for
-it in any other way than by supposing that the strange
-way in which Mr. Hogarth ordered the auction to
-be conducted puzzled the public, who, not exactly
-comprehending this new mode of bidding, declined
-attending or bidding at all.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_4" id="Page_4">[4]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>The following particulars relative to the sale were
-communicated by Mr. Lane to Mr. John Nichols:&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>"Some time after the pictures had been finished,
-perhaps six or seven years, they were advertised to be
-sold by a sort of auction, not carried on by personal
-bidding, but by a written ticket, on which every one
-was to put the price he would give, with his name
-subscribed to it. These papers were to be received by
-Mr. Hogarth for the space of one month, and the
-highest bidder at twelve o'clock, on the last day of
-the month, was to be the purchaser: none but those
-who had in writing made their biddings were to be
-admitted on the day that was to determine the sale.
-This <i lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">nouvelle</i> method of proceeding probably disobliged
-the public, and there seemed to be at that
-time a combination against poor Hogarth, who, perhaps,
-from the extraordinary and frequent approbation
-of his works, might have imbibed some degree
-of vanity, which the town in general, friends and foes,
-seemed resolved to mortify. If this was the case (and
-to me it is very apparent), they fully effected their
-design; for on the memorable 6th of June 1750, which
-was to decide the fate of this capital work, about
-eleven o'clock, Mr. Lane, the fortunate purchaser,
-arrived at the Golden Head, when, to his great surprise,
-expecting (what he had been a witness to
-in 1745, when Hogarth disposed of many of his
-pictures) to have found his painting room full of noble<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_5" id="Page_5">[5]</a></span>
-and great personages, he only found the painter and
-his ingenious friend Dr. Parsons, secretary to the
-Royal Society, talking together, and expecting a
-number of spectators at least, if not of buyers. Mr.
-Hogarth then produced the highest bidding, from a
-gentleman well known, of £110. Nobody coming in,
-about ten minutes before twelve, by the decisive clock
-in the room, Mr. Lane told Mr. Hogarth he would
-make the pounds guineas. The clock then struck
-twelve, and Hogarth wished Mr. Lane joy of his
-purchase, hoping it was an agreeable one. Mr. Lane
-answered, 'Perfectly so.' Now followed a scene of
-disturbance from Hogarth's friend the Doctor, and
-what more affected Mr. Lane, a great appearance of
-disappointment in the painter, and truly with great
-reason. The Doctor told him he had hurt himself
-greatly by fixing the determination of the sale at so
-early an hour, when the people in that part of the
-town were hardly up. Hogarth, in a tone and manner
-that could not escape observation, said, 'Perhaps it
-may be so!' Mr. Lane, after a short pause, declared
-himself to be of the same opinion; adding, that the
-artist was very poorly rewarded for his labour, and if he
-thought it would be of service to him, would give him
-till three o'clock to find a better purchaser. Hogarth
-warmly accepted the offer, and expressed his acknowledgments
-for this kindness in the strongest terms.
-The proposal likewise received great encomiums from<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_6" id="Page_6">[6]</a></span>
-the Doctor, who proposed to make it public. This
-was peremptorily forbidden by Mr. Lane, whose concession
-in favour of our artist was remembered by
-him to the time of his death. About one o'clock,
-two hours sooner than the time appointed, Hogarth
-said he could no longer trespass on his generosity,
-but that if he was pleased with his purchase, he himself
-was abundantly so with the purchaser. He then
-desired Mr. Lane to promise that he would not dispose
-of the pictures without previously acquainting
-him of his intention, and that he would never permit
-any person, under pretence of cleaning, to meddle
-with them, as he always desired to take that office
-on himself. This promise was readily made by Mr.
-Lane, who has been tempted more than once by Mr.
-Hogarth to part with his bargain at a price to be
-named by himself. When Mr. Lane bought the
-pictures they were in Carlo Maratte frames, which
-cost the painter four guineas a-piece."</p>
-
-<p>On the death of Mr. Lane the six pictures became
-the property of his nephew Colonel Cawthorne, and
-were in the summer of 1792 put up by auction at
-Mr. Christie's, and the proprietor bought them in at
-nine hundred guineas.</p>
-
-<p>They were a short time afterwards purchased by
-Mr. Angerstein, at one thousand guineas, and are
-now in his very fine collection.</p>
-
-<p>If considered in the aggregate,&mdash;in conception,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_7" id="Page_7">[7]</a></span>
-character, drawing, pencilling, and colouring,&mdash;it will
-not be easy, perhaps not possible, to find six pictures
-painted by any artist, in any age or country, in which
-such variety of superlative merit is united.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Since the publication of the first edition of these
-volumes, the following description of "Marriage à la
-Mode" was found among the papers of the late Mr.
-Lane of Hillingdon; and his family believe it to be
-Hogarth's Explanation, either copied from his own
-handwriting, or given verbally to Mr. Lane at the
-time he purchased the pictures. It is subjoined, that
-the reader may form his own judgment:&mdash;</p>
-
-
-<p class="p2 pfs100 lsp">EXPLANATION</p>
-
-<p class="p2 pfs70">OF THE PAINTINGS OF THE LATE MR. HOGARTH, CALLED</p>
-
-<p class="p1 pfs100 lsp">MARRIAGE A LA MODE.</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container"><div class="poetry">
-<p class="verse">"Where Titles deign with Cits to have and hold,</p>
-<p class="verse">And change rich blood for more substantial gold;</p>
-<p class="verse">And honour'd trade from interest turns aside,</p>
-<p class="verse">To hazard happiness for titled pride."&mdash;<span class="smcap">Garrick.</span></p>
-</div></div>
-
-
-<p class="p1 pfs100"><em>The First Picture.</em></p>
-
-<p>"There is always a something wanting to make men
-happy: the great think themselves not sufficiently
-rich, and the rich believe themselves not enough
-distinguished. This is the case of the Alderman of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_8" id="Page_8">[8]</a></span>
-London, and the motive which makes him covet for
-his daughter the alliance of a great lord; who, on his
-part, does not consent thereto but on condition of
-enriching his son;&mdash;and this is what the painter calls
-marriage <i lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">à la mode</i>.</p>
-
-<p>"These sort of marriages are truly but too common
-in England; and it is, moreover, not unfrequent
-to see them unhappy as they are ill chosen. The two
-figures of the Alderman and the Earl are in every
-respect so well characterized that they explain themselves.
-The Alderman, with an air of business,
-counts his money like a man used to this employment;
-and the Earl, full of his titles and the greatness
-of his birth, which he lets you see goes as high
-as William the Conqueror, is in an attitude which
-shows him full of pride; you think you hear him say
-<em>me</em>, <em>my</em> arms, <em>my</em> titles, <em>my</em> family, <em>my</em> ancestors:
-everything about him carries marks of distinction;
-his very crutches, the humbling consequence of his
-infirmities, are decked with an earl's coronet; these
-infirmities are introduced here as the usual consequence
-of that irregularity of living but too frequent
-among the great. The two persons who are betrothed,
-on their parts are by no means attentive to
-one another: the one looks at himself in the glass, is
-taking snuff, and thinking of nothing; the other is
-playing negligently with a ring, and seems to hear
-with indifference the conversation of a kind of a<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_9" id="Page_9">[9]</a></span>
-lawyer who attends the execution of the marriage
-articles. Another lawyer is exclaiming with admiration
-on the beauty of a building seen at a distance,
-and upon which the Earl has spent his whole fortune,
-and has not sufficient to finish the same. A number
-of idle footmen, who are about the court of this
-building, finish the representation of the ruinous
-pageantry in which the Earl is engaged."</p>
-
-
-<p class="p1 pfs100"><em>The Second Picture.</em></p>
-
-<p>"That indifference between the parties which preceded
-marriage <i lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">à la mode</i> has not been wanting to
-follow it. We unite ourselves by contract, and we
-live separately by inclination. Tired and fatigued
-one of another, such husbands and wives have nothing
-in common but a house, tiresome to the husband, and
-into which he enters as late as he can; and which
-would not be less tiresome to the lady, was it not
-sometimes the theatre of other pleasures, either in
-entertainments or routs. There is here represented
-a room where there has just been one of these routs,
-and the company just separated, as you see by the
-wax candles not yet extinguished. The clock shows
-you it is noon; and this anticipation of the night
-upon the day is not the slightest of those strokes
-which are intended to show the disorder which reigns
-in the house. Madam, who has just had her tea,
-is in an attitude which explains itself perhaps too<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_10" id="Page_10">[10]</a></span>
-much. Be that as it will, the painter's intention is
-to represent this lady neglected by her husband,
-under dispositions which make a perfect contrast with
-the present situation of this husband, who is just
-come home, and who appears in a state of the most
-perfect indifference; fatigued, exhausted, and glutted
-with pleasure. This figure of the husband, by the
-novelty of its turn, the delicacy and truth of its
-expression, is most happily executed. A steward of
-an old stamp, one of those, if such there be, who are
-contented with their salary, seizes this moment, not
-being able to find another, to settle some accounts.
-The disorder which he perceives gives him a motion
-which expresses his chagrin, and his fear for the
-speedy ruin of his master."</p>
-
-
-<p class="p1 pfs100"><em>The Third Picture.</em></p>
-
-<p>"The bad conduct of the hero of the piece must be
-shown here; the painter for this purpose introduces
-him into the apartment of a quack, where he would
-not have been but for his debauchery. He makes
-him meet at the same time, at this quack's, one of
-those women who, being ruined themselves long
-since, make afterwards the ruin of others their occupation.
-A quarrel is supposed to have arisen between
-this woman and our hero, and the subject thereof
-appears to be the bad condition, in point of health, of
-a young girl, from a commerce with whom he had<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_11" id="Page_11">[11]</a></span>
-received an injury. This poor girl makes here a
-contrast, on account of her age, her fearfulness, her
-softness, with the character of the other woman, who
-appears a composition of rage, madness, and of all
-other crimes which usually accompany these abandoned
-women towards those of their own sex. The
-doctor and his apartment are objects thrown in by
-way of episode. Although heretofore only a barber,
-he is now, if you judge by the appearance he makes,
-not only a surgeon, but a naturalist, a chemist, a
-mechanic, a physician, and an apothecary; and to
-heighten the ridicule, you see he is a Frenchman.
-The painter, to finish this character according to his
-own idea, makes him the inventor of machines extremely
-complicated for the most simple operations;
-as, one to reduce a dislocated limb, and another to
-draw the cork out of a bottle."</p>
-
-
-<p class="p1 pfs100"><em>The Fourth Picture.</em></p>
-
-<p>"This piece is amusing by the variety of characters
-therein represented. Let us begin with the principal;
-and this is Madam at her toilette: a French <i lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">valet de
-chambre</i> is putting the finishing stroke to her dress.
-The painter supposes her returned from one of those
-auctions of old goods, pictures, and an hundred other
-things which are so common at London, and where
-numbers of people of condition are duped. It is
-there that, for emulation, and only not to give place<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_12" id="Page_12">[12]</a></span>
-to another in point of expense, a woman buys at a
-great price an ugly pagod, without taste, without
-worth, and which she has no sort of occasion for. It
-is there also that an opportunity is found of conversing,
-without scandal, with people whom you cannot
-see anywhere else. The things which you see on
-the floor are the valuable acquisitions our heroine has
-just made at one of those auctions. It is extremely
-fashionable at London, to have at your house one
-of those melodious animals which are brought from
-Italy at great expense; there appears one here,
-whose figure sufficiently distinguishes him to those
-who have once seen one of those unhappy victims of
-the rage of Italians for music. The woman there is
-charmed, almost to fainting, with the ravishing voice
-of this singer; but the rest of the company do not
-seem so sensible of it. The country gentleman,
-fatigued at a stag or a fox chase, is fallen asleep.
-You see there, with his hair in papers, one of those
-personages who pass their whole life in endeavouring
-to please, but without succeeding; and there,
-with a fan in his hand, you see one of those heretics
-in love, a disciple of Anacreon. You see likewise, on
-the couch, the lawyer who is introduced in the first
-picture, talking to the lady. He appears to have
-taken advantage of the indifference of the husband,
-and that his affairs are pretty far advanced since the
-first scene. He is proposing the masquerade to his<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_13" id="Page_13">[13]</a></span>
-mistress, who does not fail to accept of it. The next
-piece proceeds to present to you the frightful consequences
-of this step."</p>
-
-
-<p class="p1 pfs100"><em>The Fifth Picture.</em></p>
-
-<p>"The houses of bagnio-keepers are yet at Paris
-what they were heretofore at London: but now the
-bath is but the accessory, the appendix of the bagnio-keepers
-of this country, and excepting two or three of
-their houses, the others have for the principal view
-of their establishment the reception of any couple,
-well or ill sorted, who are desirous of a chamber, or a
-bed, for an hour or a night. The price is fixed in
-each house: there are some where you pay five
-shillings, in others half a guinea: you enter both into
-one and the other at any time with a great deal of
-safety, and are received there with all the complaisance
-imaginable. Nothing is better furnished, more clean,
-and better conducted than these houses of debauchery.
-The masqueraders often make assignations at these
-places; and it is for such an assignation that our
-heroine has accepted of the ticket which her lover
-offers her in the former piece. A husband, whose
-wife goes to the masquerade without him, is not
-without his inquietudes; it is natural that ours here
-has secretly followed his wife thither, and from thence
-to the bagnio, where he finds her in bed with the
-lawyer. They fight;&mdash;the husband is mortally<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_14" id="Page_14">[14]</a></span>
-wounded: his wife, upon her knees, is making useless
-protestations of her remorse. The watchmen enter;
-and the lawyer, in his shirt, is getting out of the
-window."</p>
-
-
-<p class="p1 pfs100"><em>The Sixth Picture.</em></p>
-
-<p>"We are now at the house of the Alderman. London
-Bridge, which is seen through the window, shows
-the quarter where the people of business live. The
-furniture of this house does not contribute to its
-ornament;&mdash;everything shows niggardliness; and the
-dinner, which is on the table, the highest frugality.
-You see the tobacco-pipes set by in the corner: this,
-too, is a mark of great economy. Some pictures you
-see, upon very low subjects, to give you to understand
-by this choice that persons who, like the Alderman,
-pass their whole life in thinking of nothing but enriching
-themselves, generally want taste and elegance.
-Besides, everything here is contrasted with what you
-saw at the Earl's: the pride of one, and the sordidness
-of the other, are always equally ridiculous by
-the odd subjects of the pictures which are there seen;
-but generally in the choice of pictures, neither the
-analogy, taste, or agreement one with another are
-consulted. The broker only is advised with, who on
-his part consults only his own interest, of which he
-is much more capable of being a judge than he is of
-painting; like a seller of old books, who knows how<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_15" id="Page_15">[15]</a></span>
-to say, Here is an Elzevir Horace, or one of the
-Louvre edition,&mdash;and who knows all this without
-being acquainted with poetry, or capable of distinguishing
-an epigram from an epic poem. There is
-only one difference between a bookseller and a broker:
-the first has certain marks by which he knows the
-edition; and the other is obliged to have recourse to
-inspiration, which is the only way whereby he is able
-to judge infallibly, as he does, whether a picture is an
-original or no. But to return to our subject. The
-daughter of the Alderman, now a widow, is returned
-to her father. Her lover has been taken and hanged
-for the murder of her husband: this she has learned
-from the dying speech which is at her foot upon the
-floor. A conscience disturbed and tormented with
-remorse is very soon driven to despair. This woman,
-who by the consequence of her infidelity has destroyed
-her husband, her lover, her reputation, and
-her quiet, has nothing to lose but her life. This she
-does by taking laudanum. She dies. An old servant
-in tears makes her kiss her child, the melancholy
-production of an unfortunate marriage. The Alderman,
-more sensible of the least acquisition than of
-the most tragical events, takes, without emotion, a
-ring from the finger of his expiring daughter. The
-apothecary is severely reprimanding the ridiculous
-footman of the house who had procured the poison,
-the effects of which finish the catastrophe."</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_16" id="Page_16">[16]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Thus ends this explanation; and whether it was
-copied from what Hogarth wrote, or, as is more probable,
-made up from verbal remarks which he had
-made at different times, it does not in any material
-points differ from the following description of the
-plates, which was published some years before the
-editor saw or heard of the above paper.</p>
-
-
-<p class="p2" />
-<h4>PLATE I.</h4>
-
-<div class="poetry-container"><div class="poetry">
-<p class="verse4">While the proud Earl of Rollo's royal race</p>
-<p class="verse">Points to the peers his pompous parchment grace;</p>
-<p class="verse">Builds all his honours on a noble name,</p>
-<p class="verse">And on his father's deeds depends for fame;</p>
-<p class="verse">The wary citizen, with heedful eye,</p>
-<p class="verse">Inspects what's settled on posterity;</p>
-<p class="verse">Pours out the pelf by rigid avarice pil'd,</p>
-<p class="verse">To gain an empty title for his child.</p>
-<p class="verse5">In vain the pomp, in vain the gold,</p>
-<p class="verse5">Love cannot thus be bought and sold;</p>
-<p class="verse5">Such sordid motives he disdains,</p>
-<p class="verse5">Nor can be bound in Mammon's chains.</p>
-<p class="verse">With cold contempt, disgust, and deadly hate,</p>
-<p class="verse">The new-made wife regards her tawdry mate;</p>
-<p class="verse">While he, Narcissus-like, with eager gaze,</p>
-<p class="verse">Eyes those fine features which his glass displays,</p>
-<p class="verse">In his own person centres all his pride,</p>
-<p class="verse">And as his bride loves him, he loves his bride.</p>
-<p class="verse4">Like Satan, whispering in the ear of Eve</p>
-<p class="verse">(By nature form'd to ruin and deceive),</p>
-<p class="verse">A black-rob'd, smooth-tongued son of Belial see,</p>
-<p class="verse">That would betray his Saviour for a fee;</p>
-<p class="verse">With base, insidious smile, and tender air,</p>
-<p class="verse">Bend o'er the inexperienc'd, thoughtless fair,</p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_17" id="Page_17">[17]</a></span>
-<p class="verse">Assaying by his devilish art to reach</p>
-<p class="verse">The organs of her fancy, and to teach</p>
-<p class="verse">Pernicious, wicked tenets, that would taint</p>
-<p class="verse">The pure chaste virgin or the hallowed saint;</p>
-<p class="verse">Tenets of baneful, deadly, sinful dye,</p>
-<p class="verse">That lead to shame, remorse, and infamy.&mdash;E.</p>
-</div></div>
-
-<p class="p1" />
-<p class="noindent">It has been observed that woman, among savages,
-is a beast of burden; in the East, a piece of furniture;
-and in Europe, a spoiled child. Under the last
-denomination we may safely class the heroine of this
-history. She has all the pouting humours of a boarding-school
-girl. This alliance originated in her father
-wishing to aggrandize his family, and the sire of the
-Viscount wishing to clear his estate. These purposes
-answered, the two patriarchs troubled themselves no
-further. A similarity of disposition, or union of
-hearts, the nobleman considered as too vulgar an
-idea for a man of rank; and in the citizen's ledger of
-happiness there were no such items. Their dispositions
-are strongly marked by the different objects
-which engage their attention.</p>
-
-<p>The portly nobleman, with the conscious dignity of
-high birth, displays his genealogical tree, the root of
-which is "William Duke of Normandy, and conqueror
-of England." The valour of his great progenitor,
-and the various merits of the collateral branches
-which dignify his pedigree, he considers as united in
-his own person, and therefore looks upon an alliance
-with his son as the acme of honour, the apex of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_18" id="Page_18">[18]</a></span>
-exaltation. While he is thus glorying in the dust
-of which his ancestors were once compounded, the
-prudent citizen, who in return for it has parted with
-dust of a much more weighty and useful description,
-paying no regard to this heraldic blazonry, devotes
-all his attention to the marriage settlement. The
-haughty and supercilious Peer is absorbed in the
-contemplation of his illustrious ancestry, while the
-worshipful Alderman, regardless of the past, and considering
-the present as merely preparatory for the
-future, calculates what provision there will be for a
-young family. Engrossed by their favourite reflections,
-neither of these sagacious personages regards
-the want of attachment in those who are to be united
-as worthy a moment's consideration. To do the
-Viscount justice, he seems equally indifferent; for
-though evidently in love&mdash;it is with himself. Gazing
-in the mirror with delight,<a name="FNanchor_1_1" id="FNanchor_1_1"></a><a href="#Footnote_1_1" class="fnanchor">[1]</a> and in an affected style
-displaying his gold snuff-box and glittering ring, he
-is quite a husband <i lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">à la mode</i>. The lady, very well
-disposed to retaliate, plays with her wedding-ring,
-and repays this chilling coldness with sullen contempt;<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_19" id="Page_19">[19]</a></span>
-her heart is not worth the Viscount's attention,
-and she determines to bestow it on the first suitor.
-An insidious lawyer, like an evil spirit ever ready to
-move or second a temptation, appears at her right
-hand. That he is an eloquent pleader, is intimated
-by his name, Counsellor Silvertongue: that he can
-make the worse appear the better cause, is only saying
-in other words that <em>he is great in the profession</em>.
-To predict that with such an advocate her virtue is
-in danger, would not be sufficiently expressive. His
-captivating tones and insinuating manners would
-have ensnared Lucretia.</p>
-
-<p>Two dogs in a corner, coupled against their inclinations,
-are good emblems of the ceremony which is to
-pass.<a name="FNanchor_2_2" id="FNanchor_2_2"></a><a href="#Footnote_2_2" class="fnanchor">[2]</a></p>
-
-<p>The ceiling of this magnificent apartment is decorated
-with the story of Pharaoh and his host drowned
-in the Red Sea. The ocean on a ceiling proves a
-projector's taste,<a name="FNanchor_3_3" id="FNanchor_3_3"></a><a href="#Footnote_3_3" class="fnanchor">[3]</a> and attention to the costume; the
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_20" id="Page_20">[20]</a></span>sublimity of a painter is exemplified in the hero delineated
-with one of the attributes of Jove. This
-fluttering figure is probably intended for one of the
-Peer's high-born ancestors, and is invested with the
-Golden Fleece and some other foreign orders. To
-give him still greater dignity, he is in the character of
-Jupiter; while one hand holds up an ample robe, the
-other grasps a thunderbolt. A comet is taking its
-rapid course over his head; and in one corner of the
-picture two of the family of Boreas are judiciously
-blowing contrary ways. To some such supernatural<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_21" id="Page_21">[21]</a></span>
-cause we must attribute the drapery and long peruke
-flying in opposite directions. Immediately before
-him a cannon is represented in the moment of explosion:
-to leave the spectator no doubt of its being
-intended for serious business, and not as a mere <i lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">feu-de-joie</i>,
-the ball is seen in its progress. All this is
-ridiculous enough, but not an iota more absurd than
-many of the French portraits which Hogarth evidently
-intended to burlesque by this parody.<a name="FNanchor_4_4" id="FNanchor_4_4"></a><a href="#Footnote_4_4" class="fnanchor">[4]</a> Their
-painters have mistaken extravagance for spirit, and
-violence for freedom. Fine as are many of their engravings,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_22" id="Page_22">[22]</a></span>
-they frequently give us lines that resemble
-the flourishes of a writing-master more than the free
-strokes of an artist.</p>
-
-<p>In the painting which represents Goliah slain by
-David, the gigantic Philistine is stretched on the earth,
-and, in truth, appears to cover many a rood. Beneath
-is the <em>merciful</em> Judith: one hand grasps the sword
-with which she decollated Holofernes, and the other
-rests upon his bleeding head. The adjoining picture
-exhibits a view of St. Sebastian pierced with arrows,
-and that on the other side of the room displays
-Prometheus and the vulture; beneath is a representation
-of Cain slaying Abel. St. Lawrence upon the
-gridiron is placed under a painting of Herod's cruelty.
-As the ornament of a chandelier, over the sofa on
-which the hymeneal pair are seated, is a relievo of
-Medusa's head; both this and other <em>agreeable</em> subjects
-may possibly have some covert allusions, but
-to me they are not obvious.</p>
-
-<p>Hogarth's leading object in them all seems to be a
-ridicule of those who gave these barbarous delineations
-a preference to his own paintings.</p>
-
-<p>The self-important consequence of the noble inhabitant
-of this mansion is displayed in every part of
-his furniture. The coronet glitters not only upon
-the canopy, but the crutches; is mounted upon the
-frame of the mirror, and marked on the side of the
-dog.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_23" id="Page_23">[23]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Mr. Nichols observes, that "among such little circumstances
-as might escape the notice of a careless
-spectator, is the thief in the candle, emblematical of
-the mortgage on his lordship's estate."&mdash;As the mortgage
-is now paying, one thinks the thief might have
-been spared. The artist, however, might mean to
-intimate that his lordship's estate was run to waste
-by the negligence and carelessness of the proprietor.
-The same commentator properly remarks that the
-unfinished edifice seems at a stand for want of money,
-no workman appearing on the scaffolds, or near
-them; and adds, that a number of figures which are
-before the building were designed for "the lazy vermin
-of his lordship's hall, who, having nothing else to
-do, are sitting on the blocks of stone, or staring at
-the building."</p>
-
-<p>The characters in this print are admirably marked.
-Nothing can be better contrasted than the cautious,
-calculating countenance of the Alderman, and the
-haughty overbearing air of the Peer. To this may be
-added the stare of the Serjeant, astonished at so magnificent
-an edifice, and the cunning craft of the Usurer
-delivering up the mortgage.</p>
-
-<p>The plate was engraved by G. Scotin, and published
-April 1, 1745.</p>
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_24" id="Page_24">[24]</a></span></p>
-
-<p class="p2" />
-<h4>PLATE II.</h4>
-
-<div class="poetry-container"><div class="poetry">
-<p class="verse">Behold how Vice her votary rewards,</p>
-<p class="verse">After a night of folly, frolic, cards,</p>
-<p class="verse">The phantom pleasure flies,&mdash;and in its place</p>
-<p class="verse">Comes deep remorse and torturing disgrace,</p>
-<p class="verse">Corroding care, and self-accusing shame,</p>
-<p class="verse">A ruin'd fortune, and a blighted fame.&mdash;E.</p>
-</div></div>
-
-<p class="p2" />
-<div class="figcenter">
-<a name="MM_II" id="MM_II"></a>
-<img src="images/i_024fp.jpg" width="650" alt="" />
-<div class="caption">MARRIAGE A LA MODE. PLATE II.</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class="noindent">Wearied, languid, and spiritless from the dissipations
-of the night, with his sword broken in a riotous frolic,
-the modish Viscount comes home at noon, and finds
-his lady just arisen, and seated <i lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">en déshabillé</i> at her
-matin meal. From the melancholy cast of his countenance,
-and both hands being in his pockets, we may
-infer that he has been unsuccessful at the gaming-table.
-A cap and riband, which hang out of his coat
-pocket, lead us to suppose that part of his night has
-been passed in the company of a female; and from
-the attention a dog pays to the cap, we are led to
-suspect that he may have originally belonged to the
-lady who is its proprietor.</p>
-
-<p>The Viscountess<a name="FNanchor_5_5" id="FNanchor_5_5"></a><a href="#Footnote_5_5" class="fnanchor">[5]</a> has been contemplating her face
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_25" id="Page_25">[25]</a></span>in a pocket-mirror, and is scarcely recovered from
-the fatigue of a rout, which by the cards, instruments,
-and music book on the floor, we conclude to have
-been the preceding night's amusement.<a name="FNanchor_6_6" id="FNanchor_6_6"></a><a href="#Footnote_6_6" class="fnanchor">[6]</a></p>
-
-<p>An ungartered servant, who is yawning in the
-background, pays little attention to his master or
-mistress, and is totally regardless of a chair, which is
-in great danger from the blaze of an expiring candle;
-this, with those left burning in the sockets since the
-conclusion of their nocturnal revelry, must give a
-pleasing perfume to the breakfast-room.</p>
-
-<p>The old steward's attitude and countenance clearly
-indicate that he foresees the gulf into which an<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_26" id="Page_26">[26]</a></span>
-united torrent of dissipation will inevitably plunge
-this infatuated pair. He has brought a great number
-of bills for payment: to one, and only one, is a receipt,
-which, being dated January 4, 1744, determines
-the time when vulgar tradesmen are extremely
-troublesome to men of rank.</p>
-
-<p>Of the paintings in this stately saloon, that of
-which we see only a part is properly concealed by a
-curtain. The four cartoons, very judiciously placed
-in the same line, are, I believe, intended for the four
-evangelists. Next to that which is opposite the
-chandelier is a faint representation of another picture.
-The lines are ambiguous, but seem intended to represent
-a ship in a storm: a very proper emblem of the
-wreck which is likely to succeed the negligence and
-dissipation of this noble family. A marble head, in a
-cut wig, perhaps intended for one of the Cæsars, with
-the nose broken, to show that it is a genuine antique,
-decorates the centre of the chimney-piece. In most
-of the other grotesque and fantastic ornaments,</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container"><div class="poetry">
-<p class="verseq">"Gay china's unsubstantial forms supply</p>
-<p class="verse">The place of beauty, strength, simplicity;</p>
-<p class="verse">Each varied colour of the brightest hue,</p>
-<p class="verse">The green, the red, the yellow, and the blue,</p>
-<p class="verse">In every part the dazzled eyes behold,</p>
-<p class="verse">Here streak'd with silver, there enrich'd with gold."</p>
-</div></div>
-
-<p>A painting over the chimney-piece represents Cupid
-playing upon the bagpipes. Both subject and frame
-prove the classical taste of the proprietor. The<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_27" id="Page_27">[27]</a></span>
-ornaments round a clock are equally elegant and
-peculiarly appropriate. It is encompassed by a kind
-of grove, with a cat on the summit and a Chinese
-pagoda at the bottom. If the branches were tenanted
-by the feathered tribe, it would be no more than we
-see every day; it would be vulgar nature. To make
-it uncommonly grand, and peculiarly magnifique,
-they are occupied by two fishes.<a name="FNanchor_7_7" id="FNanchor_7_7"></a><a href="#Footnote_7_7" class="fnanchor">[7]</a></p>
-
-<p>The crowned chandelier, candlesticks, chairs, footstool,
-chimney-piece, and grate, are evidently made
-from the designs of William Kent.<a name="FNanchor_8_8" id="FNanchor_8_8"></a><a href="#Footnote_8_8" class="fnanchor">[8]</a> To that fashionable
-architect they are indebted for the plan of the
-stupendous saloon, which has an air of grandeur and
-magnificence that is not often seen in Mr. Hogarth's
-works. It produces such a sensation as Pope describes
-on seeing Timon's villa, "Where all cry out,
-what sums are thrown away!"</p>
-
-<p>This plate was engraved by Baron, but the old
-steward's face is, I think, marked by the burin of
-Hogarth.</p>
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_28" id="Page_28">[28]</a></span></p>
-
-<p class="p2" />
-<h4>PLATE III.</h4>
-
-<div class="poetry-container"><div class="poetry">
-<p class="verseq">"To Galen's great descendant list,&mdash;oh list!</p>
-<p class="verse">Behold a surgeon, sage, anatomist,</p>
-<p class="verse">Mechanic, antiquarian, seer, collector,</p>
-<p class="verse">Physician, barber, bone-setter, dissector.</p>
-<p class="verse">The sextons, registers, and tombstones tell,</p>
-<p class="verse">By his prescriptions, what an army fell;</p>
-<p class="verse">Med'cines&mdash;by him compos'd will stop the breath,</p>
-<p class="verse">And every pill is fraught with certain death."<a name="FNanchor_9_9" id="FNanchor_9_9"></a><a href="#Footnote_9_9" class="fnanchor">[9]</a>&mdash;E.</p>
-</div></div>
-
-<p class="p2" />
-<div class="figcenter">
-<a name="MM_III" id="MM_III"></a>
-<img src="images/i_028fp.jpg" width="650" alt="" />
-<div class="caption">MARRIAGE A LA MODE. PLATE III.</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class="noindent">This has been said to be the most obscure delineation
-that Hogarth ever published: how far the short
-explanation copied from Mr. Lane's papers may contribute
-to sanction my previous description, I do not
-presume to judge. Hitherto there have certainly been
-many different opinions as to the meaning of this
-print, and Churchill is said to have asserted, that from
-its appearing so ambiguous to him, he once requested
-Hogarth to explain it, but that the artist, like many
-other commentators, left his subject as obscure as he
-found it. "From this circumstance," added the poet,
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_29" id="Page_29">[29]</a></span>"I am convinced he formed his tale upon the ideas
-of Hoadley, Garrick, Townley, or some other friend,
-and never perfectly comprehended what it meant."</p>
-
-<p>How it was possible for Hoadley, Garrick, and
-Townley, or any other friend, to furnish Hogarth with
-ideas to compose the third plate of an historical series,
-I cannot comprehend.</p>
-
-<p>I can suppose it possible that the artist might not
-choose to explain to Churchill what he himself
-thought obvious, and therefore declined giving him
-any explanation. I can suppose that, admirably as
-Hogarth told a story with his pencil, he might not be
-qualified to express his verbal meaning with equal
-accuracy, and therefore be misunderstood; but, above
-all, I can suppose it not only possible, but probable,
-that this bitter satirist, making the declaration <em>after</em>
-the publication of "Wilkes' Portrait," "The Bruiser,"
-and "The Times," might, from resentment to the artist,
-be provoked to give a poetical colouring to the story
-about the "Marriage à la Mode."</p>
-
-<p>I think it must be considered as a sort of episode,
-no further connected with the main subject than as it
-exhibits the consequences of an alliance entered into
-from sordid and unworthy motives. In the two preceding
-prints the hero and heroine of this tragedy
-show a fashionable indifference towards each other.
-On the part of the Viscount, we see no indication of
-any wish to conciliate the affections of his lady.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_30" id="Page_30">[30]</a></span>
-Careless of her conduct, and negligent of her fame,
-he leaves her to superintend the musical dissipations
-of his house, and lays the scene of his own licentious
-amusements abroad. The female heart is naturally
-susceptible, and much influenced by first impressions.
-Formed for love, and gratefully attached by delicate
-attentions; but chilled by neglect, and frozen by
-coldness,&mdash;by contempt it is estranged, and by
-habitual and long-continued inconstancy sometimes
-lost.</p>
-
-<p>To show that our unfortunate victim to parental
-ambition has suffered this mortifying climax of provocation,
-the artist has made a digression, and
-exhibited her profligate husband attending a quack
-doctor. In the last plate he appears to have dissipated
-his fortune; in this he has injured his health.
-From the hour of marriage he has neglected the
-woman to whom he plighted his troth. Can we
-wonder at her conduct? By the Viscount she was
-despised; by the Counsellor adored. This insidious,
-insinuating villain, we may naturally suppose acquainted
-with every part of the nobleman's conduct,
-and artful enough to make a proper advantage of his
-knowledge. From such an agent the Countess would
-probably learn how her lord was connected: from his
-subtle suggestions, being aided by resentment, she is
-tempted to think that these accumulated insults have
-dissolved the marriage vow, and given her a right to<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_31" id="Page_31">[31]</a></span>
-retaliate. Thus impelled, thus irritated, and attended
-by such an advocate, can we wonder that this fair
-unfortunate deserted from the standard of honour,
-and sought refuge in the camp of infamy? To her
-husband many of her errors must be attributed. She
-saw he despised her, and therefore hated him; found
-that he had bestowed his affections on another, and
-followed his example. To show the consequence of
-his unrestrained wanderings, the author, in this plate,
-exhibits his hero in the house of one of those needy
-empirics who play upon public credulity, and vend
-poisons under the name of drugs. This quack being
-family surgeon to the old procuress who stands at his
-right hand, formerly attended the young girl, and
-received his fee as having recovered his patient. That
-he was paid for what he did not perform, appears by
-the countenance of the enraged nobleman, who lifts
-up his cane in a threatening style, accompanying the
-action with a promise to bastinado both surgeon and
-procuress for having deceived him by a false bill of
-health. These menaces our natural son of Æsculapius
-treats with that careless nonchalance which shows
-that his ears are accustomed to such sounds; but the
-haggard high priestess of the temple of Venus,<a name="FNanchor_10_10" id="FNanchor_10_10"></a><a href="#Footnote_10_10" class="fnanchor">[10]</a><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_32" id="Page_32">[32]</a></span>
-tenacious of her good name, and tremblingly alive to
-any aspersion which may tend to injure her professional
-reputation, unclasps her knife, determined to
-wash out this foul stain upon her honour with the
-blood of her accuser.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_33" id="Page_33">[33]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>The nick-nackitory collection that forms this motley
-museum is exactly described by Doctor Garth; one
-would almost think Hogarth made the dispensary his
-model in designing the print.</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container"><div class="poetry">
-<p class="verseq">"Here mummies lie, most reverently stale,</p>
-<p class="verse">And there, the tortoise hung her coat of mail:</p>
-<p class="verse">Not far from some huge shark's devouring head,</p>
-<p class="verse">The flying fish their finny pinions spread;</p>
-<p class="verse">Aloft, in rows, large poppy-heads were strung,</p>
-<p class="verse">And near, a scaly alligator hung:</p>
-<p class="verse">In this place, drugs in musty heaps decay'd,</p>
-<p class="verse">In that, dry'd bladders and drawn teeth were laid."</p>
-</div></div>
-
-<p>An horn of the sea unicorn is so placed as to give
-the idea of a barber's pole; this, with the pewter
-basin and broken comb, clearly indicate the former
-profession of our mock doctor. The high-crowned
-hat and antique spur, which might once have been
-the property of Butler's redoubted knight, the valiant
-Hudibras, with a model of the gallows, and sundry
-nondescript rarities, show us that this great man, if
-not already a member of the Antiquarian Society,
-is qualifying himself to be a candidate. The dried
-body<a name="FNanchor_11_11" id="FNanchor_11_11"></a><a href="#Footnote_11_11" class="fnanchor">[11]</a> in the glass-case, placed between a skeleton
-and the sage's wig-block, form a trio that might serve<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_34" id="Page_34">[34]</a></span>
-as the symbol of a consultation of physicians. A
-figure above the mummies seems at first sight to be
-decorated with a flowing periwig, but on a close inspection
-will be found intended for one of Sir John
-Mandeville's <em>anthropophagi</em>, a sort of men "whose
-heads do grow beneath their shoulders." Even the
-skulls have character; and the principal mummy has
-so majestic an aspect, that one is almost tempted to
-believe it the mighty Cheops, king of Egypt, whose
-body was certainly to be known, being the only one
-entombed in the large pyramid.<a name="FNanchor_12_12" id="FNanchor_12_12"></a><a href="#Footnote_12_12" class="fnanchor">[12]</a></p>
-
-<p>By two machines, constructed upon the most complicated
-principles, though intended for performing
-very simple operations, we discover that our quack
-studies mechanics. On one of them lies a folio
-treatise descriptive of their uses; by which we are
-informed that the largest is to reduce a dislocated
-limb, the smallest is to draw a cork!&mdash;each of them
-invented by Monsieur De la Pilulæ, and inspected
-and approved by the Royal Academy of Paris.</p>
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_35" id="Page_35">[35]</a></span></p>
-
-<p class="p2" />
-<h4>PLATE IV.</h4>
-
-<div class="poetry-container"><div class="poetry">
-<p class="verse">The new-made Countess treads enchanted ground,</p>
-<p class="verse">And madly whirls in pleasure's airy round;</p>
-<p class="verse">From Circe's cup delicious poison quaffs,</p>
-<p class="verse">And, drunk with pomp, at cold discretion laughs.</p>
-<p class="verse">While the soft warbling of a senseless song,</p>
-<p class="verse">Pour'd from a neutral nothing,<a name="FNanchor_13_13" id="FNanchor_13_13"></a><a href="#Footnote_13_13" class="fnanchor">[13]</a> charms the throng;</p>
-<p class="verse">To love's fond tale the fair her ear inclines,</p>
-<p class="verse">To Satan's agent all her soul resigns.</p>
-<p class="verse5">Beware his soft insidious smiles,</p>
-<p class="verse4">Fly from his glance, and shun his wiles;</p>
-<p class="verse4">Avoid the serpent's poisonous breath,</p>
-<p class="verse4">'Tis fraught with infamy and death.&mdash;E.</p>
-</div></div>
-
-<p class="p2" />
-<div class="figcenter">
-<a name="MM_IV" id="MM_IV"></a>
-<img src="images/i_036fp.jpg" width="650" alt="" />
-<div class="caption">MARRIAGE A LA MODE. PLATE IV.</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class="noindent">By the old Peer's death our fair heroine has attained
-the summit of her wishes, and become a Countess.
-Intoxicated by this elevation, and vain of her new
-dignity, she ranges through the whole circle of frivolous
-amusements, and treads every maze of fashionable
-dissipation. Her excesses are rendered still
-more criminal by the consequent neglect of domestic
-duties; for, by the coral on the back of her chair, we
-are led to suppose that she is a mother. Her morning
-levee is crowded with persons of rank, and attended
-by her paramour, and that contemptible shadow of
-man, an Italian singer, with whose dulcet notes two
-of our right honourable group seem in the highest
-degree enraptured. This bloated animal, carelessly
-and consequentially leaning back in his chair, is<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_36" id="Page_36">[36]</a></span>
-dressed in a richly embroidered coat, and every finger
-is loaded with a diamond. Though in a morning, his
-solitaire, kneebands, and shoes are decorated with
-gems.<a name="FNanchor_14_14" id="FNanchor_14_14"></a><a href="#Footnote_14_14" class="fnanchor">[14]</a> He is quavering,</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container"><div class="poetry">
-<p class="verseq">"The seeming echo of what once was song,</p>
-<p class="verse">Sweet by defect, and impotently strong."</p>
-</div></div>
-
-<p>That our extravagant Countess purchased the pipe
-of this expensive exotic in mere compliance to the
-fashion of the day, without any real taste for his
-mellifluous warblings, is intimated by the absorbed
-attention which she pays to the Advocate, who, with
-the luxuriant indolent grace of an Eastern effendi, is
-lolling on a sofa at her right hand. By his pointing
-to the folding screen, on which is delineated a
-masquerade revel,<a name="FNanchor_15_15" id="FNanchor_15_15"></a><a href="#Footnote_15_15" class="fnanchor">[15]</a> at the same time that he shows
-his infatuated <i lang="it" xml:lang="it">inamorato</i> a ticket of admission, we see
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_37" id="Page_37">[37]</a></span>that they are making an assignation for the evening.
-The fatal consequences of their unfortunate meeting
-is displayed in the two succeeding plates. A Swiss
-servant, who is dressing her hair, has all the grimace
-of his country; he is the complete Canton of the
-<cite>Clandestine Marriage</cite>. The contemptuous leer of a
-black footman, serving chocolate, is evidently directed
-to the singer, and forms an admirable contrast to the
-die-away lady seated before him,<a name="FNanchor_16_16" id="FNanchor_16_16"></a><a href="#Footnote_16_16" class="fnanchor">[16]</a> who, lost to every
-sense but that of hearing, is exalted to the third heaven
-by the enchanting song of this pampered Italian. On
-the country gentleman,<a name="FNanchor_17_17" id="FNanchor_17_17"></a><a href="#Footnote_17_17" class="fnanchor">[17]</a> with a whip in his hand, it has
-quite a different effect; with the echoing "Tally ho!"
-he would be exhilarated; by the soft sounds of Italia,
-his soul is lulled to rest. The <em>fine feeling</em> creature,
-with a fan suspended from <em>its</em> wrist, is marked with
-that foolish face of praise which understands nothing,
-but admires everything that it is the <i lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">ton</i> to admire!
-The taper supporters of Monsieur <i lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">en papillote</i> are
-admirably opposed to the lumbering pedestals of our
-mummy of music. The figure behind him<a name="FNanchor_18_18" id="FNanchor_18_18"></a><a href="#Footnote_18_18" class="fnanchor">[18]</a> blows a
-flute with every muscle of his face. A little black
-boy in the opposite corner, examining a collection
-of grotesque china ornaments which have been purchased
-at the sale of Esquire Timothy Babyhouse, pays
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_38" id="Page_38">[38]</a></span>great attention to a figure of Acteon, and with a very
-significant leer points to his horns. Under a delineation
-of Jupiter and Leda, on a china dish, is written,
-"Julio Romano!" The fantastic group of hydras,
-gorgons, and chimeras dire, which lie near it, are an
-admirable specimen of the absurd and shapeless
-monsters which disgraced our drawing-rooms until
-the introduction of Etrurian ornaments. By the fantastic
-decorations upon a chimney-piece in the second
-plate, we saw that our fashionable pair had a taste,
-and this taste may have been one source of their embarrassments.
-Another of their follies which, when
-gaming is united to it, will level their lofty forests and
-lay their proudest mansions in the dust, is displayed
-in the cards of invitation scattered on the floor. They
-afford a good specimen of polite literature, and the
-writers deserve a niche in the catalogue of royal and
-noble authors. The list follows:&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>"Count Basset desire to no how Lady Squander
-sleep last nite."</p>
-
-<p>"Lord Squander's company is desired at Lady
-Townley's drum. Monday next."</p>
-
-<p>"Lady Squander's company is desired at Miss
-Hairbrain's rout."</p>
-
-<p>"Lady Squander's company is desired at Lady
-Heathen's drum-major. Sunday next."</p>
-
-<p>The pictures in this dressing-room are well suited to
-the profligate proprietor, and may be further intended<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_39" id="Page_39">[39]</a></span>
-as a burlesque on the strange and grossly indelicate
-subjects so frequently painted by ancient masters:
-Lot and his daughters; Ganymede and the Eagle;<a name="FNanchor_19_19" id="FNanchor_19_19"></a><a href="#Footnote_19_19" class="fnanchor">[19]</a>
-Jupiter and Io; and a portrait of the young Lawyer,
-who is the favourite&mdash;the <i lang="it" xml:lang="it">cicisbeo</i>&mdash;or more properly,
-the seducer of the Countess.</p>
-
-<p>This print was engraved by Ravenet, who has preserved
-the characters.</p>
-
-
-<p class="p2" />
-<h4>PLATE V.</h4>
-
-<div class="poetry-container"><div class="poetry">
-<p class="verse">Her dream of dissipation o'er,</p>
-<p class="verse">The bubble pleasure charms no more;</p>
-<p class="verse">The spell dissolv'd&mdash;broken the chain,</p>
-<p class="verse">Reason too late resumes her reign.&mdash;</p>
-<p class="verse">In vain the tear and contrite sigh,</p>
-<p class="verse">In vain the poignant agony.&mdash;</p>
-<p class="verse4">Henceforth&mdash;thy portion is despair,</p>
-<p class="verse">Remorse, and deep corroding care;</p>
-<p class="verse">Misery!&mdash;to madness near allied,</p>
-<p class="verse">And ignominious suicide,</p>
-<p class="verse">Thy minion's meed, by law's decree,</p>
-<p class="verse">Is death&mdash;a death of infamy!&mdash;E.</p>
-</div></div>
-
-<p class="p2" />
-<div class="figcenter">
-<a name="MM_V" id="MM_V"></a>
-<img src="images/i_040fp.jpg" width="650" alt="" />
-<div class="caption">MARRIAGE A LA MODE. PLATE V.</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class="noindent">Our exasperated Peer, suspecting his wife's infidelity,
-follows her in disguise to the masquerade, and from
-thence traces these two votaries of vice to a bagnio.
-Finding they are retired to a bedroom, he bursts open
-the door, and attacks the spoiler of his honour with a<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_40" id="Page_40">[40]</a></span>
-drawn sword. Too much irritated to be prudent, and
-too violent to be cautious, he thinks only of revenge;
-and, making a furious thrust at the Counsellor, neglects
-his own guard, and is mortally wounded. The
-miscreant who had basely destroyed his peace and
-deprived him of life is not bold enough to meet the
-consequences. Destitute of that courage which is the
-companion of virtue, and possessing no spark of that
-honour which ought to distinguish the gentleman;
-dreading the avenging hand of offended justice, he
-makes a mean and precipitate retreat. Leaving him
-to the fate which awaits him, let us return to the deluded
-Countess. Feeling some pangs from a recollection
-of her former conduct, some touches of shame at
-her detection, and a degree of horror at the fate of
-her husband, she kneels at his feet, and entreats forgiveness.</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container"><div class="poetry">
-<p class="verse">"Some contrite tears she shed."</p>
-</div></div>
-
-<p>There is reason to fear that they flow from regret
-at the detection rather than remorse for the crime; a
-woman vitiated in the vortex of dissipation is not
-likely to feel that ingenuous shame which accompanies
-a good mind torn by the consciousness of
-having deviated from the path of virtue.</p>
-
-<p>Alarmed at the noise occasioned by this fatal <i lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">rencontre</i>,
-the inmates of the brothel called a watchman:
-accompanied by a constable, this nocturnal guardian
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_41" id="Page_41">[41]</a></span>is ushered into the room by the master of the house,
-whose meagre and trembling figure is well opposed
-to the consequential magistrate of the night. The
-watchman's lantern we see over their heads, but the
-bearer knows his duty is to follow his superiors; conscious
-that though the front may be a post of honour,
-yet in a service of danger the rear is a station of
-safety.</p>
-
-<p>Immediately over the door is a picture of St. Luke;
-this venerable apostle being a painter, is so delineated
-that he seems looking at the scene now passing, and
-either making a sketch or a record of the transaction.
-On the hangings is a lively representation of Solomon's
-wise judgment.<a name="FNanchor_20_20" id="FNanchor_20_20"></a><a href="#Footnote_20_20" class="fnanchor">[20]</a> The countenance of the sapient
-monarch is not sagacious, but his attitude is in an<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_42" id="Page_42">[42]</a></span>
-eminent degree dignified, and his air commanding
-and regal. He really looks like a tyrant in old
-tapestry; and the arm of a chair is ornamented by
-a carving fraught with that terrific grace peculiar to
-the ancient masters. We cannot say that the Hebrew
-women who attend for judgment are either comely
-or fair to look upon. Were not the scene laid in
-Jerusalem, they might pass for two of the silver-toned
-Naiades of our own Billingsgate.</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container"><div class="poetry">
-<p class="verse4">The grisly guards, with faces all awry,</p>
-<p class="verse">Like Herod's hang-dogs in old tapestry:</p>
-<p class="verse">Each man an Askapart, with strength to toss</p>
-<p class="verse">For quoits, both Temple-bar and Charing-cross.</p>
-</div></div>
-
-<p>The grisly guards have a most rueful and tremendous
-appearance. The attractive portrait of a Drury<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_43" id="Page_43">[43]</a></span>
-Lane Diana,<a name="FNanchor_21_21" id="FNanchor_21_21"></a><a href="#Footnote_21_21" class="fnanchor">[21]</a> with a butcher's steel in one hand and
-a squirrel perched on the other, is hung in such a
-situation that the Herculean pedestals of a Jewish
-soldier may be supposed to be a delineation of her
-legs continued below the frame.</p>
-
-<p>Our Counsellor's mask lies on the floor, and grins
-horribly, as if conscious of the fatal catastrophe.
-Dominoes, shoes, etc., scattered around the room,
-show the negligence of the ill-fated Countess, unattended
-by her <i lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">femme de chambre</i>. From a faggot
-and the shadow of a pair of tongs, we may infer that
-there is a fire in the room.<a name="FNanchor_22_22" id="FNanchor_22_22"></a><a href="#Footnote_22_22" class="fnanchor">[22]</a> A bill near them implies
-that this elegant apartment is at the Turk's Head
-bagnio.</p>
-
-<p>The dying agony of the Earl (whose face is evidently
-retouched by Hogarth), the eager entreaty of the
-Countess, the terror of mine host, and the vulgar
-inflected dignity of Mr. Constable, are admirably discriminated.</p>
-
-<p>I have stated in the former editions that the background
-of this plate was engraved by Ravenet's wife,
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_44" id="Page_44">[44]</a></span>but am since informed by Mr. Charles Grignion, the
-engraver, that this is a mistake. See vol. iii. of this
-work.</p>
-
-
-<p class="p2" />
-<h4>PLATE VI.</h4>
-
-<div class="poetry-container"><div class="poetry">
-<p class="verse4">Forlorn, degraded, and distrest,</p>
-<p class="verse4">The furies tear her tortur'd breast.</p>
-<p class="verse4">Remorse, with agonizing sigh,</p>
-<p class="verse4">And sullen shame with downcast eye;</p>
-<p class="verse4">Anguish,&mdash;by cold reflection fed,</p>
-<p class="verse4">And wan despair, and trembling dread,</p>
-<p class="verse4">In guise terrific hover round,</p>
-<p class="verse4">And ring the knell of thrilling sound.</p>
-<p class="verse4">Scar'd Reason totters on her throne,</p>
-<p class="verse4">And Hope is fled!&mdash;and Peace is gone.</p>
-<p class="verse">Shuddering at phantoms ever in her sight,</p>
-<p class="verse">Hating the garish sun, and trembling at the night;</p>
-<p class="verse">To poison,&mdash;sad resort! she frantic flies,</p>
-<p class="verse">And, self-destroy'd, the wretched Countess dies!&mdash;E.</p>
-</div></div>
-
-<p class="p2" />
-<div class="figcenter">
-<a name="MM_VI" id="MM_VI"></a>
-<img src="images/i_044fp.jpg" width="650" alt="" />
-<div class="caption">MARRIAGE A LA MODE. PLATE VI.</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class="noindent">The last sad scene of our unfortunate heroine's life is
-in the house of her father, to which she had returned
-after her husband's death. The law could not consider
-her as the primary cause of his murder; but
-consciousness of her own guilt was more severe
-punishment than that could have inflicted. This,
-added to her father's reproaches, and the taunts of
-those who were once her friends, renders society
-hateful, and solitude insupportable. Wounded in
-every feeling, tortured in every nerve, and seeing no
-prospect of a period to her misery, she takes the horrid
-resolution of ending all her calamities by poison.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_45" id="Page_45">[45]</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container"><div class="poetry">
-<p class="verse4">"Dreadful deed, unbidden thus</p>
-<p class="verse">To rush into the presence of her Judge,</p>
-<p class="verse">And challenge vengeance. 'Tis said</p>
-<p class="verse">Unheard-of tortures are reserved</p>
-<p class="verse">For murderers of themselves. They herd together:</p>
-<p class="verse">The common damn'd shun their society,</p>
-<p class="verse">As fiends too foul for converse."</p>
-</div></div>
-
-<p>Dreadful as is this resolve, she puts it in execution
-by bribing the servant of her father to procure her a
-dose of laudanum. Close to the vial, which lies on
-the floor, Hogarth has judiciously placed Counsellor
-Silvertongue's last dying speech, thus intimating that
-he also has suffered the punishment he justly merited.<a name="FNanchor_23_23" id="FNanchor_23_23"></a><a href="#Footnote_23_23" class="fnanchor">[23]</a>
-The records of their fate being thus situated, seems to
-imply, that as they were united in vice, they are companions
-in the consequences. These two terrific and
-monitory testimonies are a kind of propitiatory sacrifice
-to the manes of her injured and murdered lord.</p>
-
-<p>Her avaricious father, seeing his daughter at the
-point of death, and knowing the value of her diamond
-ring, determined to secure this glittering gem from
-the depredations of the old nurse, coolly draws it from
-her finger. This little circumstance shows a prominent
-feature of his mind. Every sense of feeling
-absorbed in extreme avarice, he seems at this moment
-calculating how many carats the brilliants weigh.</p>
-
-<p>From a gown hung up near the clock we know him<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_46" id="Page_46">[46]</a></span>
-to be an alderman; and from his sleek appearance,
-we have some right to infer that he is constant in his
-attendance at city feasts, for so comely a countenance
-could never be supported by the scanty and meagre
-viands of his own table. His domestic care is intimated
-by the gaunt and hungry appearance of a dog,
-who, taking advantage of this general confusion, seizes
-the brawn's head.<a name="FNanchor_24_24" id="FNanchor_24_24"></a><a href="#Footnote_24_24" class="fnanchor">[24]</a></p>
-
-<p>A rickety child, heir to the complaints of its father,
-shows some tenderness for its expiring mother; and
-the grievous whine of an old nurse is most admirably
-described. These are the only two of the party who<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_47" id="Page_47">[47]</a></span>
-exhibit any marks of sorrow for the death of our
-wretched Countess. The smug apothecary, indeed,
-displays some symptoms of vexation at his patient
-dying before she has taken his julap, the label of
-which hangs out of his pocket. Her constitution,
-though impaired by grief, promised to have lasted
-long enough for him to have marked many additional
-dittos in his day-book. Pointing to the dying speech,
-he threatens the terrified footboy with a punishment
-similar to that of the Counsellor for having bought
-the laudanum. The fellow protests his innocence,
-and promises never more to be guilty of a like offence.
-The effects of fear on an ignorant rustic cannot be
-better delineated; nor is it easy to conceive a more
-ludicrous figure than this awkward retainer, dressed
-in an old full-trimmed coat, which in its better days
-had been the property of his master. By the physician
-retreating, we are led to conceive that, finding
-his patient had dared to quit the world in an irregular
-way, neither abiding by his prescriptions nor waiting
-for his permission, he cast an indignant frown on all
-present, and exclaimed in style heroic,</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container"><div class="poetry">
-<p class="verseq">"&nbsp;'Fellow, our hat!'&mdash;no more he deign'd to say,</p>
-<p class="verse">But stern as Ajax' spectre, stalk'd away."</p>
-</div></div>
-
-<p>The leathern buckets immediately over the Doctor's
-head were, previous to the introduction of fire-engines,
-considered as proper furniture for a merchant's hall.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_48" id="Page_48">[48]</a></span>
-Every ornament in his parlour is highly and exactly
-appropriate to the man. The style of his pictures,
-his clock, a cobweb over the window, repaired chair,
-nay, the very form of his hat, are characteristic. A
-silver cup upon the table, and jug on the floor, show
-us his style of living. The scantiness of his own table
-is well contrasted by the plenty exhibited in the
-picture over the old nurse's head, where iron pots,
-brass pans, cabbages, and lanterns, are indiscriminately
-huddled together, with no other meaning than
-to show how highly a Flemish artist could <em>finish</em>.
-The <em>attic</em> delicacy of this patient and laborious
-school is displayed in the adjoining picture; and
-their humour, in that of a fellow wittily lighting his
-tobacco-pipe by the red nose of his companion.<a name="FNanchor_25_25" id="FNanchor_25_25"></a><a href="#Footnote_25_25" class="fnanchor">[25]</a> The
-pipe and bottle placed under the day-book and ledger,
-and the whole crowned by a broken punch-bowl,
-intimate that this venerable gentleman united business
-with pleasure. The view through an open
-window marks the situation of our plodding merchant's
-house to be near London Bridge, and represents
-that absurd and ill-contrived structure in its
-original state, loaded with houses. A clock points
-the hour to be a little after eleven, which at this
-highly polished and refined period would be deemed<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_49" id="Page_49">[49]</a></span>
-an early hour for a citizen's breakfast; at that, it was
-his hour of dinner!</p>
-
-<p>Thus has our moral dramatist concluded his tragedy,
-and brought his heroine from dissipation and vice to
-misery and shame, terminating her existence by suicide!</p>
-
-<p>The drama of Shakspeare has been said to be the
-mirror of life, which to-day we see lighted up with
-gaiety, and to-morrow clouded with sorrow. Shakspeare
-had the power of exciting laughter or grief, not
-only in one mind, but in one composition. That
-Hogarth had the same power, and exerted it with
-the same disdain of the little cavils of little minds, is
-evinced in this series of prints; from the study of
-which, a peasant, who has never strayed beyond the
-precincts of his own cottage, may calculate the consequences
-of dissipation; and he who has lived
-secluded from society, may form an estimate of the
-value of riches and high birth when abused by prodigality
-or degraded by vice.</p>
-
-<p>In the year 1746 was published a coarse and vulgar
-poem, in doggerel verse, with the following title:
-"<cite>Marriage à la Mode</cite>, an humorous tale in six cantos,
-in Hudibrastic verse, being an Explanation of the six
-Prints lately published by the ingenious Mr. Hogarth.
-London, printed for Weaver Bickerton, in Temple
-Exchange Passage, Fleet Street. Price One Shilling."</p>
-
-<p>The <cite>Clandestine Marriage</cite> is professedly formed
-upon the model of these prints.</p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_50" id="Page_50">[50]</a></span></p>
-
-<h3>THE FOUR STAGES OF CRUELTY.</h3>
-
-<div class="poetry-container"><div class="poetry">
-<p class="verseq">"The poorest beetle that we tread upon,</p>
-<p class="verse">In corporal sufferance feels a pang as great</p>
-<p class="verse">As when a giant dies."</p>
-</div></div>
-
-<div>
-<img class="drop-cap" src="images/dc_050.jpg" alt="" />
-</div>
-
-<p class="drop-capx">This pathetic lesson of humanity is given by
-the poet of nature. Aiming at the same
-end by different means, our benevolent
-artist here steps forth as the instructor of youth, the
-friend to mercy, and advocate of the brute creation.</p>
-
-<p>In the prints before us, an obdurate boy begins his
-career of cruelty by tormenting animals; repeated
-acts of barbarity sear his heart, he commits a deliberate
-murder, and concludes in an ignominious death.
-These gradations are natural, I had almost said inevitable;
-and that parent who discovers the germ of
-barbarity in the mind of a child, and does not use
-every effort to exterminate the noxious weed, is an
-accessory to the evils which spring from its baneful
-growth. To check these malign propensities becomes
-more necessary from the general tendency of our
-amusements. Most of our rural and even infantine
-sports are savage and ferocious. They arise from the
-terror, misery, or death of helpless animals. A child<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_51" id="Page_51">[51]</a></span>
-in the nursery is taught to impale butterflies and
-cockchafers. The schoolboy's proud delight is clambering
-a tree</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container"><div class="poetry">
-<p class="verse">"To rob the poor bird of its young."</p>
-</div></div>
-
-<p>Grown a <em>gentle</em> angler, he snares the scaly fry, and
-scatters leaden death among the feathered tenants of
-the air. Ripened to man, he becomes a mighty
-hunter, is enamoured of the chase, and crimsons his
-spurs in the sides of a generous courser, whose wind
-he breaks in the pursuit of an inoffensive deer or
-timid hare.</p>
-
-<p>Many of our town diversions have the same
-tendency. The bird, whose melodious warblings
-echo through the grove, is imprisoned in a sort of a
-<i lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Bastille</i>, where, like an unplumed biped in a similar
-situation, it frequently perishes through anguish or
-want of food. The high-crested chanticleer, whose
-courage is innate, and only vanquished by death, is
-furnished with weapons of pointed steel, when, set in
-opposition to one of the same species, armed in a
-similar style, these two champions, for the diversion
-of the <em>humane</em> lords of the creation, lacerate each
-other until one or both of them are slain.</p>
-
-<p>The faithful dog, whose attachment and gratitude
-are exemplary, and worthy the imitation of man,
-when in the possession of a farmer, or country 'squire,
-is well fed, and has no great cause of complaint,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_52" id="Page_52">[52]</a></span>
-except his ears and tail being lopped to <em>improve
-nature</em>, and having a rib now and then broken by a
-gentle spurn; but if the poor quadruped falls into
-the hands of a tanner, a surgeon, or an <em>experimental</em>
-philosopher, of what avail are his good qualities?<a name="FNanchor_26_26" id="FNanchor_26_26"></a><a href="#Footnote_26_26" class="fnanchor">[26]</a></p>
-
-<p>The Abyssinian cruelties of our slaughter-houses<a name="FNanchor_27_27" id="FNanchor_27_27"></a><a href="#Footnote_27_27" class="fnanchor">[27]</a>
-and kitchens<a name="FNanchor_28_28" id="FNanchor_28_28"></a><a href="#Footnote_28_28" class="fnanchor">[28]</a> I do not wish to enumerate. The
-catalogue would fill a volume. Humanity demands
-that the brute creation should be protected by the
-Legislature.</p>
-
-<p>The Mosaic Law, to guard against tortures being
-inflicted on animals which were slaughtered for
-sustenance, ordained them to die by a highly polished
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_53" id="Page_53">[53]</a></span>and pointed instrument; if the bone was pierced,
-or the beast mangled, it was deemed unclean, and
-burnt.</p>
-
-
-<p class="p2" />
-<h4>FIRST STAGE OF CRUELTY.</h4>
-
-<div class="poetry-container"><div class="poetry">
-<div class="stanza">
-<p class="verseq">"While various scenes of sportive woe</p>
-<p class="verse4">The infant race employ;</p>
-<p class="verse">And tortur'd victims bleeding, show</p>
-<p class="verse4">The tyrant in the boy.</p>
-</div>
-<div class="stanza">
-<p class="verseq">"Behold a youth of gentler heart!</p>
-<p class="verse4">To spare the creature's pain,</p>
-<p class="verse">O take, he cries&mdash;take all my tart,</p>
-<p class="verse4">But tears and tart are vain.</p>
-</div>
-<div class="stanza">
-<p class="verseq">"Learn from this fair example, you</p>
-<p class="verse4">Who savage sports delight,</p>
-<p class="verse">How cruelty disgusts the view,</p>
-<p class="verse4">While pity charms the sight."</p>
-</div></div></div>
-
-<p class="p2" />
-<div class="figcenter">
-<a name="SC_I" id="SC_I"></a>
-<img src="images/i_054fp.jpg" width="550" alt="" />
-<div class="caption">FIRST STAGE OF CRUELTY.</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class="noindent">Let us suppose a disciple of Pythagoras to contemplate
-this print, how would it affect him? He would
-imagine it to represent a group of young barbarians
-qualifying themselves for executioners; would raise
-his voice to Heaven, and thank the God of mercy
-that he is not an inhabitant of such a country; would
-lament that these degenerate little beings should not
-have been informed that the animals on whom they are
-now inflicting such tortures, might, previous to transmigration,
-have been their fathers, brothers, friends.</p>
-
-<p>The delineation of such scenes must shock every<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_54" id="Page_54">[54]</a></span>
-feeling heart, and their enumeration disgust every
-humane mind. I hope, for the honour of our nature
-and our nation, that they are not so frequently practised
-as when these prints were published.</p>
-
-<p>The hero of this tragic tale is Tom Nero: by a
-badge upon his arm, we know him to be one of the
-boys of St. Giles' Charity School. The horrible
-business in which he is engaged was, I hope and
-believe, never realized in this or any other country.
-The thought is taken from Callot's "Temptation of
-St. Anthony." A youth of superior rank, shocked at
-such cruelty, offers his tart to redeem the dog from
-torture. This Hogarth intended for the portrait of
-an illustrious personage, then about thirteen years
-of age; the compliment was rather coarse, but well
-intended. A lad chalking on a wall the suspended
-figure, inscribed <span class="smcap">Tom Nero</span>, prepares us for the
-future fate of this young tyrant, and shows by anticipation
-the reward of cruelty.</p>
-
-<p>Throwing at cocks might possibly have its origin in
-what some of our sagacious politicians call a natural
-enmity to France, which is thus <em>humanely</em> exercised
-against the allegorical symbol of that nation. A boy
-tying a bone to the tail of his dog, while the kind-hearted
-animal licks his hand, must have a most
-diabolical disposition.<a name="FNanchor_29_29" id="FNanchor_29_29"></a><a href="#Footnote_29_29" class="fnanchor">[29]</a> Two little imps are burning
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_55" id="Page_55">[55]</a></span>out the eyes of a bird with a knitting-needle. A
-group of embryotic Domitians, who have tied two
-cats to the extremities of a rope and hung it over a
-lamp-iron, to see how <em>delightfully</em> they will tear each
-other, are marked with grim delight. The link-boy
-is absolutely a Lilliputian fiend. The fellow encouraging
-a dog to worry a cat, and two animals of
-the same species thrown out of a garret window
-with bladders fastened to them, completes this mortifying
-prospect of youthful depravity.</p>
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_56" id="Page_56">[56]</a></span></p>
-
-<p class="p2" />
-<h4>SECOND STAGE OF CRUELTY.</h4>
-
-<div class="poetry-container"><div class="poetry">
-<div class="stanza">
-<p class="verseq">"The generous steed in hoary age,</p>
-<p class="verse4">Subdued by labour lies,</p>
-<p class="verse">And mourns a cruel master's rage,</p>
-<p class="verse4">While nature strength denies.</p>
-</div>
-<div class="stanza">
-<p class="verseq">"The tender lamb, o'er-drove and faint,</p>
-<p class="verse4">Amidst expiring throes,</p>
-<p class="verse">Bleats forth its innocent complaint,</p>
-<p class="verse4">And dies beneath the blows.</p>
-</div>
-<div class="stanza">
-<p class="verseq">"Inhuman wretch! Say, whence proceeds</p>
-<p class="verse4">This coward cruelty?</p>
-<p class="verse">What interest springs from barbarous deeds?</p>
-<p class="verse4">What joy from misery?"</p>
-</div></div></div>
-
-
-<div class="poetry-container"><div class="poetry">
-<p class="verse">If, as the Samian taught, the soul revives,</p>
-<p class="verse">And shifting seats, in other bodies lives,</p>
-<p class="verse">Severe shall be the brutal coachman's change,</p>
-<p class="verse">Doom'd in a hackney horse the town to range;</p>
-<p class="verse">Carmen, transform'd, the groaning load shall draw,</p>
-<p class="verse">Whom other tyrants with the lash shall awe!</p>
-</div></div>
-
-<p class="p2" />
-<div class="figcenter">
-<a name="SC_II" id="SC_II"></a>
-<img src="images/i_056fp.jpg" width="550" alt="" />
-<div class="caption">SECOND STAGE OF CRUELTY.</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class="noindent">Tom Nero is now a hackney coachman, and displaying
-his disposition in his conduct to a horse. Worn
-out by ill-usage, and exhausted by fatigue, the poor
-animal has fallen down, overset the carriage, and
-broken his leg. The scene is laid at Thavie's Inn
-gate:<a name="FNanchor_30_30" id="FNanchor_30_30"></a><a href="#Footnote_30_30" class="fnanchor">[30]</a> four brethren of the brawling bar, who have
-joined to pay threepence each for a ride to Westminster
-Hall, are in consequence of the accident
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_57" id="Page_57">[57]</a></span>overturned, and exhibited at the moment of creeping
-out of the carriage. These ludicrous periwig-pated
-personages were probably intended as portraits of
-advocates eminent in their day; their names I am
-not able to record.</p>
-
-<p>A man taking the number of the coach is marked
-with traits of benevolence, which separate him from
-the savage ferocity of Nero or the guilty terror of
-these affrighted lawyers.</p>
-
-<p>As a further exemplification of extreme barbarity,
-a drover is beating an expiring lamb with a large
-club. The wheels of a dray pass over an unfortunate
-boy, while the drayman, regardless of consequences,
-sleeps on the shafts.<a name="FNanchor_31_31" id="FNanchor_31_31"></a><a href="#Footnote_31_31" class="fnanchor">[31]</a></p>
-
-<p>In the background is a poor overladen ass: the
-master, presuming on the strength of this patient and
-ill-treated animal, has mounted upon his back, and
-taken a loaded porter behind him. An over-driven
-bull, followed by a crowd of heroic spirits, has tossed
-a boy.<a name="FNanchor_32_32" id="FNanchor_32_32"></a><a href="#Footnote_32_32" class="fnanchor">[32]</a> Two bills pasted on the wall advertise cock-fighting
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_58" id="Page_58">[58]</a></span>and Broughton's Amphitheatre<a name="FNanchor_33_33" id="FNanchor_33_33"></a><a href="#Footnote_33_33" class="fnanchor">[33]</a> for boxing,
-as further specimens of national civilisation.</p>
-
-<p>Parts of this print may at first sight appear rather
-overcharged, but some recent examples convince us
-that they are not so. In the year 1790, a fellow was
-convicted of lacerating and tearing out the tongue of
-a horse; but there being no evidence of his bearing
-any malice towards the proprietor, or doing it with a
-view of injuring <em>him</em>, this diabolical wretch, not having
-violated any then existing statute, was discharged
-without punishment.</p>
-
-
-<p class="p2" />
-<h4>CRUELTY IN PERFECTION.</h4>
-
-<div class="poetry-container"><div class="poetry">
-<div class="stanza">
-<p class="verseq">"To lawless love, when once betray'd,</p>
-<p class="verse4">Soon crime to crime succeeds;</p>
-<p class="verse">At length beguil'd to theft, the maid</p>
-<p class="verse4">By her beguiler bleeds.</p>
-</div>
-<div class="stanza">
-<p class="verseq">"Yet learn, seducing men, not night,</p>
-<p class="verse4">With all its sable cloud,</p>
-<p class="verse">Can screen the guilty deed from sight:</p>
-<p class="verse4">Foul murder cries aloud!</p>
-</div>
-<div class="stanza">
-<p class="verseq">"The gaping wounds, the blood-stain'd steel,</p>
-<p class="verse4">Now shock his trembling soul;</p>
-<p class="verse">But ah! what pangs his breast must feel</p>
-<p class="verse4">When death his knell shall toll!"</p>
-</div></div></div>
-
-<p class="p2" />
-<div class="figcenter">
-<a name="SC_III" id="SC_III"></a>
-<img src="images/i_058fp.jpg" width="550" alt="" />
-<div class="caption">CRUELTY IN PERFECTION.</div>
-</div>
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_59" id="Page_59">[59]</a></span></p>
-
-<p class="noindent">An early indulged habit of wanton cruelty strengthens
-by time, chokes every good disposition, corrupts the
-mind, and sears the heart. We cannot say to the
-malevolent passions,</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container"><div class="poetry">
-<p class="verse">"Thus far shall ye go, and no further."</p>
-</div></div>
-
-<p>The hero of this print began by torturing a helpless
-dog; he then beat out the eye of an unoffending
-horse; and now, under the influence of that malignant
-rancorous spirit, which by indulgence is become
-natural, he commits murder&mdash;most foul and aggravated
-murder!&mdash;for this poor deluded girl is pregnant
-by the wretch who deprives her of life. He tempts
-her to quit a happy situation; to plunder an indulgent
-mistress, and meet him with the produce of her
-robbery. Blinded by affection, she keeps the fatal
-appointment, and comes loaded with plate. This
-remorseless villain, having previously determined to
-destroy her, and by that means cancel his promise of
-marriage, free himself from an expected encumbrance,
-and silence one whom compunction might at a future
-day induce to confess the crime and lead to his detection,
-puts her to death!</p>
-
-<p>This atrocious act must have been perpetrated with
-most savage barbarity, for the head is nearly severed,
-and the wrist cut almost through. Her cries are
-heard by the servants of a neighbouring house, who
-run to her assistance. 'Tis too late. The horrid deed<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_60" id="Page_60">[60]</a></span>
-is done! The ethereal spirit is forced from its earthly
-mansion,</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container"><div class="poetry">
-<p class="verse">"Unhousell'd, unappointed, unaneal'd!"</p>
-</div></div>
-
-<p class="noindent">but the murderer, appalled by conscious guilt, and
-rendered motionless by terror, cannot fly. He is
-seized without resistance, and consigned to that
-punishment which so aggravated a violation of the
-laws of nature and his country demand.</p>
-
-<p>The glimpses of the moon, the screech-owl and bat
-hovering in the air, the mangled corpse, and above
-all, the murderer's ghastly and guilty countenance,
-give terrific horror to this awful scene.<a name="FNanchor_34_34" id="FNanchor_34_34"></a><a href="#Footnote_34_34" class="fnanchor">[34]</a></p>
-
-<p>By the pistol in his pocket and watches on the
-ground, we have reason to infer that this callous
-wretch has been committing other depredations in
-the earlier part of the evening. The time is what
-has been emphatically called "the witching hour!"&mdash;the
-iron tongue of midnight has told <span class="fs80">ONE</span>!</p>
-
-<p>The letter found in his pocket gives a history of the
-transaction; it appears to be dictated by the warmest
-affection, and written by the woman he has just
-murdered, previous to her elopement:&mdash;</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_61" id="Page_61">[61]</a></span></p><div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>"<span class="smcap">Dear Tommy</span>,&mdash;My mistress has been the best
-of women to me, and my conscience flies in my face
-as often as I think of wronging her; yet I am resolved
-to venture body and soul to do as you would
-have me; so do not fail to meet me as you said you
-would, for I shall bring along with me all the things I
-can lay my hands on. So no more at present; but
-I remain yours till death.</p>
-
-<p class="right smcap">"Ann Gill."</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>This is the simple effusion of a too credulous heart;
-whatever would lessen the solemnity of the scene is
-carefully avoided; neither bad spelling, nor any other
-ridiculous circumstances that might create laughter
-are introduced.</p>
-
-
-<p class="p2" />
-<h4>THE REWARD OF CRUELTY.</h4>
-
-<div class="poetry-container"><div class="poetry">
-<div class="stanza">
-<p class="verseq">"Behold, the villain's dire disgrace,</p>
-<p class="verse4">Not death itself can end;</p>
-<p class="verse">He finds no peaceful burial-place,</p>
-<p class="verse4">His breathless corpse&mdash;no friend.</p>
-</div>
-<div class="stanza">
-<p class="verseq">"Torn from the root that wicked tongue,</p>
-<p class="verse4">Which daily swore and curst;</p>
-<p class="verse4">Those eye-balls from their sockets wrung,</p>
-<p class="verse">That glow'd with lawless lust.</p>
-</div>
-<div class="stanza">
-<p class="verseq">"His heart exposed to prying eyes,</p>
-<p class="verse4">To pity has no claim;</p>
-<p class="verse">But dreadful! from his bones shall rise</p>
-<p class="verse4">His monument of shame."</p>
-</div></div></div>
-
-<p class="p2" />
-<div class="figcenter">
-<a name="SC_IV" id="SC_IV"></a>
-<img src="images/i_062fp.jpg" width="550" alt="" />
-<div class="caption">THE REWARD OF CRUELTY.</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class="noindent">The savage and diabolical progress of cruelty is now
-ended, and the thread of life severed by the sword of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_62" id="Page_62">[62]</a></span>
-justice. From the place of execution the murderer is
-brought to Surgeons' Hall, and now represented under
-the knife of a dissector. This venerable person, as
-well as his coadjutor, who scoops out the criminal's
-eye, and a young student scarifying the leg, seem to
-have just as much feeling as the subject now under
-their inspection.<a name="FNanchor_35_35" id="FNanchor_35_35"></a><a href="#Footnote_35_35" class="fnanchor">[35]</a> A frequent contemplation of sanguinary
-scenes hardens the heart, deadens sensibility,
-and destroys every tender sensation.</p>
-
-<p>Our legislators, considering how unfit such men are
-to determine in cases of life and death, have judiciously
-excluded both surgeons and butchers from
-serving upon juries.</p>
-
-<p>Hogarth was most peculiarly accurate in those little
-markings which identify. The gunpowder initials T.
-N. on the arm, denote this to be the body of Thomas
-Nero. The face being impressed with horror has been
-objected to. It must be acknowledged that this is
-rather "o'er-stepping the modesty of nature;" but he
-so rarely deviates from her laws, that a little poetical
-licence may be forgiven where it produces humour or
-heightens character.</p>
-
-<p>The skeletons on each side of the print are inscribed
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_63" id="Page_63">[63]</a></span>"James Field" (an eminent pugilist), and
-"Maclean" (a notorious robber). Both of these
-worthies died by a rope. They are pointing to the
-physician's crest which is carved on the upper part of
-the president's<a name="FNanchor_36_36" id="FNanchor_36_36"></a><a href="#Footnote_36_36" class="fnanchor">[36]</a> chair, viz. a hand feeling a pulse;
-taking a guinea would have been more appropriate to
-the practice. The heads of these two heroes of the
-halter are turned so as to seem ridiculing the president,
-"Scoffing his state, and grinning at his pomp."
-Every countenance in this grisly band is marked with
-that medical importance which dignifies the professors.
-Some of them we discover to be "from Caledonia's
-bleak and barren clime."</p>
-
-<p>A fellow depositing the intestines in a pail, and a
-dog licking the murderer's heart, are disgusting and
-nauseous objects. The vessel where the skulls and
-bones bubble-bubble, gives some idea of the infernal
-caldron of Hecate.</p>
-
-<p>Of this print, and that preceding it, there are<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_64" id="Page_64">[64]</a></span>
-wooden blocks engraved upon a large scale, invented
-and published by "William Hogarth, Jan. 1, 1750; J.
-Bell, sculpt." They were executed by order of Mr.
-Hogarth, who wished to circulate the salutary examples
-they contain, by making the price low enough
-for a poor man's purse; but finding engraving on
-wood much more expensive than he had calculated,
-he altered his plan, and engraved them on copper.</p>
-
-<p class="p4" />
-<div class="figcenter">
-<img src="images/end_064.jpg" alt="" />
-</div>
-
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_65" id="Page_65">[65]</a></span></p>
-
-<h3>BEER STREET AND GIN LANE.</h3>
-
-<p class="fs80">"The nature and use of aliments maketh men either chaste or incontinent;
-either courageous or cowardly; either meek or quarrelsome:
-let those who deny these truths come to me; let them follow my counsel
-in eating and drinking, and I promise them they will find great helps
-thereupon towards moral philosophy. They will acquire more prudence,
-more diligence, more memory."&mdash;<span class="smcap">Galen.</span></p>
-
-<div>
-<img class="drop-cap" src="images/dc_065.jpg" alt="" />
-</div>
-
-<p class="drop-capx">Fully impressed with the truth of this
-axiom, Mr. Hogarth engraved the two following
-prints, in which he has considered
-porter as the liquor natural to an English constitution;
-and that villanous distillation, gin, as pernicious
-and poisonous. While that noble beverage properly
-termed British Burgundy<a name="FNanchor_37_37" id="FNanchor_37_37"></a><a href="#Footnote_37_37" class="fnanchor">[37]</a> refreshes the weary,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_66" id="Page_66">[66]</a></span>
-exhilarates the faint, and cheers the depressed, an
-infernal compound of juniper and fiery spirits debases
-the mind, destroys the constitution, and brings its
-thirsty votaries to an untimely grave.</p>
-
-<p>These, as well as the four preceding prints, are
-calculated for the lower orders of society, and exhibit
-such a contrast as must strike the most careless observer.
-In the first, we see healthy and happy beings
-inhaling copious draughts of a liquor which seems
-perfectly congenial to their mental and corporeal
-powers; in the second, a group of emaciated wretches
-who, by swallowing liquid fire, have consumed both.</p>
-
-
-<p class="p2" />
-<h4>BEER STREET.</h4>
-
-<div class="poetry-container"><div class="poetry">
-<div class="stanza">
-<p class="verseq">"Beer, happy product of our isle,</p>
-<p class="verse4">Can sinewy strength impart;</p>
-<p class="verse">And wearied with fatigue and toil,</p>
-<p class="verse4">Can cheer each manly heart.</p>
-</div>
-<div class="stanza">
-<p class="verseq">"Labour and art, upheld by thee,</p>
-<p class="verse4">Successfully advance;</p>
-<p class="verse">We quaff the balmy juice with glee,</p>
-<p class="verse4">And water leave to France.</p>
-</div>
-<div class="stanza">
-<p class="verseq">"Genius of health, thy grateful taste</p>
-<p class="verse4">Rivals the cup of Jove;</p>
-<p class="verse">And warms each English, generous breast,</p>
-<p class="verse4">With liberty and love."</p>
-</div></div></div>
-
-<p class="p2" />
-<div class="figcenter">
-<a name="BS" id="BS"></a>
-<img src="images/i_066fp.jpg" width="550" alt="" />
-<div class="caption">BEER STREET.</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class="noindent">This admirable delineation is a picture of John Bull
-in his most happy moments. In the left corner, a
-butcher and a blacksmith are each of them grasping
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_67" id="Page_67">[67]</a></span>a foaming tankard of porter. By the <cite>King's Speech</cite>
-and the <cite>Daily Advertiser</cite> upon the table before them,
-they appear to have been studying politics, and
-settling the state of the nation. The blacksmith
-having just purchased a shoulder of mutton, is triumphantly
-waving it in the air. Next to him a
-drayman is whispering soft sentences of love to a
-servant-maid, round whose neck is one of his arms;
-in the other hand a pot of porter. Two fish-women,
-furnished with a flagon of the same liquor, are chaunting
-a song of Mr. Lockman's<a name="FNanchor_38_38" id="FNanchor_38_38"></a><a href="#Footnote_38_38" class="fnanchor">[38]</a> on the British Herring
-Fishery. A porter having put a load of waste-paper<a name="FNanchor_39_39" id="FNanchor_39_39"></a><a href="#Footnote_39_39" class="fnanchor">[39]</a>
-on the ground, is eagerly quaffing this best of barley
-wine.</p>
-
-<p>On the front of a house in ruins, is inscribed
-"Pinch, pawnbroker," and through a hole in the door
-a boy delivers a full half-pint. In the background
-are two chairmen.<a name="FNanchor_40_40" id="FNanchor_40_40"></a><a href="#Footnote_40_40" class="fnanchor">[40]</a> They have joined for threepenny-worth
-to recruit their spirits, and repair the fatigue
-they have undergone in <em>trotting between two poles</em>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_68" id="Page_68">[68]</a></span>with a ponderous load of female frailty. Two paviors
-are washing away their cares with a heart-cheering
-cup. In a garret window a trio of sailors are employed
-in the same way; and on a house-top are four
-bricklayers equally joyous. Each of these groups
-seem hale, happy, and well clothed; but the artist,
-who is painting a glass bottle from an original which
-hangs before him, is in a truly deplorable plight, at the
-same time that he carries in his countenance a perfect
-consciousness of his talents in this creative art.<a name="FNanchor_41_41" id="FNanchor_41_41"></a><a href="#Footnote_41_41" class="fnanchor">[41]</a></p>
-
-
-<p class="p2" />
-<h4>GIN LANE.</h4>
-
-<div class="poetry-container"><div class="poetry">
-<div class="stanza">
-<p class="verseq">"Gin, cursed fiend! with fury fraught,</p>
-<p class="verse4">Makes human race a prey;</p>
-<p class="verse">It enters by a deadly draught,</p>
-<p class="verse4">And steals our life away.</p>
-</div>
-<div class="stanza">
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_69" id="Page_69">[69]</a></span>
-<p class="verseq">"Virtue and Truth, driv'n to despair,</p>
-<p class="verse4">Its rage compels to fly;</p>
-<p class="verse">But cherishes with hellish care,</p>
-<p class="verse4">Theft, murder, perjury.</p>
-</div>
-<div class="stanza">
-<p class="verseq">"Damn'd cup! that on the vitals preys,</p>
-<p class="verse4">That liquid fire contains;</p>
-<p class="verse">Which madness to the heart conveys,</p>
-<p class="verse4">And rolls it thro' the veins."</p>
-</div></div></div>
-
-<p class="p2" />
-<div class="figcenter">
-<a name="GL" id="GL"></a>
-<img src="images/i_068fp.jpg" width="550" alt="" />
-<div class="caption">GIN LANE.</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class="noindent">From contemplating the health, happiness, and
-mirth flowing from a moderate use of a wholesome
-and natural beverage, we turn to this nauseous contrast,
-which displays human nature in its most
-degraded and disgusting state. The retailer of gin
-and ballads,<a name="FNanchor_42_42" id="FNanchor_42_42"></a><a href="#Footnote_42_42" class="fnanchor">[42]</a> who sits upon the steps with a bottle in
-one hand and a glass in the other, is horribly fine.
-Having bartered away his waistcoat, shirt, and stockings,
-and drank until he is in a state of total insensibility;
-pale, wan, and emaciated, he is a perfect
-skeleton. A few steps higher is a debased counterpart
-of Lazarus, taking snuff; thoroughly intoxicated, and
-negligent of the infant at her breast, it falls over the
-rail into an area, and dies an innocent victim to the
-baneful vice of its depraved parent. Another of the
-fair sex has drank herself to sleep. As an emblem
-of her disposition being slothful, a snail is crawling
-from the wall to her arm. Close to her we discover
-one of the lords of the creation gnawing a bare bone,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_70" id="Page_70">[70]</a></span>
-which a bull-dog, equally ravenous, endeavours to
-snatch from his mouth. A working carpenter is
-depositing his coat and saw with a pawnbroker. A
-tattered female offers her culinary utensils at the
-same shrine: among them we discover a tea-kettle
-pawned to procure money to purchase gin.<a name="FNanchor_43_43" id="FNanchor_43_43"></a><a href="#Footnote_43_43" class="fnanchor">[43]</a> An old
-woman, having drank until she is unable to walk,
-is put into a wheel-barrow, and in that situation a
-lad solaces her with another glass. With the same
-poisonous and destructive compound, a mother in the
-corner drenches her child. Near her are two charity-girls
-of St. Giles', pledging each other in the same
-corroding compound. The scene is completed by a
-quarrel between two drunken mendicants, both of
-whom appear in the character of cripples. While one
-of them uses his crutch as a quarterstaff, the other
-with great goodwill aims a stool, on which he usually
-sat, at the head of his adversary. This, with a crowd
-waiting for their drams at a distiller's door, completes
-the catalogue of the <em>quick</em>. Of the <em>dead</em> there are
-two, besides an unfortunate child whom a drunken
-madman has impaled upon a spit.<a name="FNanchor_44_44" id="FNanchor_44_44"></a><a href="#Footnote_44_44" class="fnanchor">[44]</a> One a barber,
-who, having probably drank gin until he has lost his
-reason, has suspended himself by a rope in his own
-ruinous garret; the other a beautiful woman, whom by
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_71" id="Page_71">[71]</a></span>direction of the parish beadle two men are depositing
-in a shell. From her wasted and emaciated appearance,
-we may fairly infer she also fell a martyr to
-this destructive and poisonous liquid. On the side of
-her coffin is a child lamenting the loss of its parent.</p>
-
-<p>The large pewter measure hung over a cellar, on
-which is engraved "Gin Royal," was once a common
-sign; the inscription on this cave of despair, "Drunk
-for a penny, dead drunk for twopence, clean straw
-for nothing," is worthy observation; it exhibits the
-state of our metropolis at that period.</p>
-
-<p>The scene of this horrible devastation is laid in a
-place which was a few years since properly enough
-called the Ruins of St. Giles'.<a name="FNanchor_45_45" id="FNanchor_45_45"></a><a href="#Footnote_45_45" class="fnanchor">[45]</a> Except the pawnbroker's,
-distiller's, and undertaker's, the houses are
-literally ruins! These doorkeepers to Famine, Disease,
-and Death, living by the calamities of others, are
-in a flourishing state.<a name="FNanchor_46_46" id="FNanchor_46_46"></a><a href="#Footnote_46_46" class="fnanchor">[46]</a></p>
-
-<p>Mr. Hogarth seems to have received the first idea
-of these two prints from a pair by Peter Breughel
-(frequently called <i lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Breughel d'enfer</i>), which exhibit a
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_72" id="Page_72">[72]</a></span>similar contrast. In the one entitled "La Grosse" are
-a number of comely and well-fed personages; in the
-other, which is baptized "La Maigre Cuisine," the
-characters are meagre and wasted: seated on a straw
-mat are a mother and child, which very much resemble
-the wretched female we see upon the steps in the print
-under consideration.</p>
-
-<p>To the perspective little attention is paid, but the
-characters are admirably discriminated. The emaciated
-retailer of gin is well drawn. The woman
-with a snuff-box has all the mawkish marks of debasement
-and drunkenness. The man gnawing a
-bone, a dog tearing it from him, and the pawnbroker,
-have countenances in an equal degree hungry and
-rapacious.</p>
-
-<p>A print entitled the "Gin Drinkers," which bears
-strong marks of being one of Hogarth's early productions,
-may perhaps have been the first thought on
-which this print was built.</p>
-
-<p>On the subject of these plates was published a
-catchpenny compilation from Reynolds' "God's Revenge
-against Murder," entitled "<cite>A Dissertation on
-Mr. Hogarth's six prints&mdash;'Gin Lane,' 'Beer Street,'
-and the 'Four Stages of Cruelty.'</cite>"</p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_73" id="Page_73">[73]</a></span></p>
-
-<h3>PAUL BEFORE FELIX.</h3>
-
-<p class="negin2 fs90"><em>Designed and etched in the ridiculous manner of Rembrandt, by
-William Hogarth. Published according to the Act of
-Parliament, May 1, 1751.</em></p>
-
-<p class="pfs80">"Each hero is a pillar of darkness, and the sword a beam of fire."<a name="FNanchor_47_47" id="FNanchor_47_47"></a><a href="#Footnote_47_47" class="fnanchor">[47]</a>&mdash;<span class="smcap">Fingal</span>,
-Book <span class="fs80">I.</span> p. 21.</p>
-
-<p class="p2" />
-<div class="figcenter">
-<a name="PF" id="PF"></a>
-<img src="images/i_074fp.jpg" width="650" alt="" />
-<div class="caption">PAUL BEFORE FELIX.</div>
-</div>
-
-<div>
-<img class="drop-cap" src="images/dc_073.jpg" alt="" />
-</div>
-
-<p class="drop-capx">For the etchings of Rembrandt, and a herd of
-servile imitators who, without any of his
-genius, copied his defects, Hogarth had the
-most sovereign contempt. He considered their productions
-as unmeaning scratches, as dingy and violent
-combinations of light and darkness, which would not
-bear to be tried by the criterion of either nature or
-art. How far he was right in his opinion is not my
-inquiry; but certain it is, that at the time of this
-publication they had the sanction of those who were
-deemed good judges, and produced most enormous
-prices. To correct this vitiated taste, and bring men<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_74" id="Page_74">[74]</a></span>
-back to reason and common sense, our whimsical
-artist etched this very grotesque print.</p>
-
-<p>The Apostle, conformable to the general practice
-of the Flemish school, is represented as a mean and
-vulgar character. Among the Lilliputians he might
-have been a giant; among the Romans he must have
-been a dwarf. In the true spirit of Dutch allegory,
-a figure fat enough for a burgomaster, invested with
-wings "that clad each shoulder broad," is seated on
-the floor behind him as a guardian angel. At this
-unpropitious moment the guardian angel is asleep,
-and a little imp of darkness,<a name="FNanchor_48_48" id="FNanchor_48_48"></a><a href="#Footnote_48_48" class="fnanchor">[48]</a> ever active in mischief,
-is busily employed with a hand-saw cutting through
-the leg of the Apostle's stool, which falling, must inevitably
-bring the orator to the ground, where he will
-probably be seized by the snarling dog on whose
-collar is engraved "Felix," and who seems to have
-an eye to the saint, though his nose is evidently
-pointed at his appalled master. Seated in a wicker
-chair, with the Roman eagle over his head, and the
-fasces at his left hand, Felix indeed trembles. On
-an adjoining seat is the all-accomplished Drusilla
-and her lap-dog. Her olfactory nerves, as well as
-those of her companion, are violently affected. With
-a sacrificing knife in his right hand, his left clenched,
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_75" id="Page_75">[75]</a></span>and a countenance irritated almost to madness, the
-High Priest appears ready to leap from the bench and
-put the Apostle to death, but is prevented by a more
-prudent senator. The audience are worthy of the
-judges; male and female, young and old, are in dress,
-deportment, and feature, perfectly Dutch. Of the
-same school is the statue of Justice, with a bandage
-over one eye, and grasping, in the place of a flaming
-sword, a butcher's knife.<a name="FNanchor_49_49" id="FNanchor_49_49"></a><a href="#Footnote_49_49" class="fnanchor">[49]</a> She stands in awful state,
-laden with bags of gold, the rewards of legal decisions.</p>
-
-<p>At a table beneath the bench are five curious
-characters. The first, maugre the thundering eloquence
-of St. Paul, is asleep; the next, mending a
-pen; two adjoining are highly offended with a noxious
-effluvia, while their bearded associate is grinning and
-pointing at the cause from which it emanates. Regardless
-of all other objects, an Hebrew counterpart
-of Shylock is expanding his hands in astonishment
-at the unguarded vehemence of the preacher. Not
-less exasperated is Tertullus, who, arrayed in the habit
-of an English serjeant-at-law,<a name="FNanchor_50_50" id="FNanchor_50_50"></a><a href="#Footnote_50_50" class="fnanchor">[50]</a> has nothing Roman
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_76" id="Page_76">[76]</a></span>but his nose. Boiling with rage, and irritated almost
-to madness, he tears his brief: this, a devil, who to
-give him peculiar distinction has three horns, is carefully
-picking up and joining the remnants together.<a name="FNanchor_51_51" id="FNanchor_51_51"></a><a href="#Footnote_51_51" class="fnanchor">[51]</a>
-The vase, and silver plates in a recess, the violent
-stream of light which dazzles the eyes of a priest
-<em>who stands with his back to it</em>, the boat, bark, and
-white sail glittering in the wave, and a village and
-windmill in the distance, are all of Rembrandt's
-school.</p>
-
-<p>The plate was originally intended as a receipt-ticket
-to the large "Paul before Felix," and "Pharaoh's
-Daughter;" and the artist stained many early impressions
-with that yellow tint which time gives to old
-prints. For the Paul, and Moses, he afterwards engraved
-another design, and presented this to any of
-his friends who requested it; but finding applications
-increase, he fixed the price at five shillings.<a name="FNanchor_52_52" id="FNanchor_52_52"></a><a href="#Footnote_52_52" class="fnanchor">[52]</a></p>
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_77" id="Page_77">[77]</a></span></p>
-
-<p class="p2" />
-<h4>PLATE I.</h4>
-
-<p class="negin2 fs90"><em>Engraved by William Hogarth, from his original painting
-in Lincoln's-Inn Hall, and published as the Act directs,
-Feb. 5, 1752.</em></p>
-
-<p class="pfs80">"And as he reasoned of righteousness, temperance, and judgment to
-come, Felix trembled."</p>
-
-<p class="p2" />
-<div class="figcenter">
-<a name="PP_I" id="PP_I"></a>
-<img src="images/i_076fp.jpg" width="650" alt="" />
-<div class="caption">PAUL PREACHING BEFORE FELIX.</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class="noindent">This print Mr. Hogarth intended as a serious and
-sublime representation of the scene which he had so
-inimitably burlesqued; yet so little are we qualified
-to judge of our own powers, that he has here produced
-a print as destitute of elevation and sentiment as are
-the works of those masters he so successfully ridiculed.
-With the Roman eagle he could not soar, and
-has drawn the royal bird like a sparrow-hawk, nailed
-to the bottom of a writing-desk. The Apostle, with
-his right foot resting on a lower step than the left,
-has neither grace, dignity, nor firmness. Felix has
-the appearance of a vinegar-faced apothecary feeling
-the pulse of a nervous female patient, and shocked at
-the velocity of our circulation, dropping the prescription
-from his left hand. The haughty High Priest
-biting his nails, is deficient in everything except his
-drapery: the Jew immediately behind him bears a
-strong resemblance to an old-clothes-man. The
-standard-bearer, and woman with her hands closed,
-are a degree better; but the Herculean advocate,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_78" id="Page_78">[78]</a></span>
-with a brief in his right hand, looks like a journeyman
-hatter that has drank porter till he is drowsy; by
-the strength of his muscles and the stupidity of his
-countenance, he seems better fitted for a bruiser than
-a pleader.</p>
-
-<p>The listening soldier, at the opposite corner, is
-meanly conceived and ill drawn.</p>
-
-<p>At the bottom of one of the copies I once saw the
-following memorandum in the handwriting of Hogarth:
-"A print of the plate that was set aside as insufficient.
-Engraved by W. H."</p>
-
-
-<p class="p2" />
-<h4>PLATE II.</h4>
-
-<p class="pfs90"><em>From the original painting in Lincoln's-Inn Hall, painted
-by Wm. Hogarth.</em></p>
-
-<p class="p2" />
-<div class="figcenter">
-<a name="PP_II" id="PP_II"></a>
-<img src="images/i_078fp.jpg" width="650" alt="" />
-<div class="caption">PAUL PREACHING BEFORE FELIX.</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class="noindent">This is engraved from the same design as the former,
-but the situation of the figures is reversed, and
-Drusilla omitted, it being thought that St. Paul's
-hand was rather improperly placed.</p>
-
-<p>It is somewhat superior to the former, but the light
-is ill distributed, and the characters too individual for
-the dignity of historical composition.</p>
-
-<p>Upon this and the following print Doctor Joseph
-Warton, in his <cite>Essay on the Genius and Writings of
-Pope</cite>, made the following remark. Trusting to his
-memory, he confounded two prints together, and
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_79" id="Page_79">[79]</a></span>remembering to have seen a dog snarling at a cat in
-the fourth print of "Industry and Idleness," from an
-error in recollection, transferred them to the "Paul
-before Felix:"&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>"Some nicer virtuosi have remarked, that in the
-serious pieces into which Hogarth has deviated from
-the natural bias of his genius there are some strokes
-of the ridiculous discernible, which suit not with the
-dignity of his subject. In his Preaching of St. Paul, a
-dog snarling at a cat; and in his Pharaoh's Daughter,
-the figure of the infant Moses, who expresses rather
-archness than timidity, are alleged as instances that
-this artist, unrivalled in his walk, could not resist the
-impulse of his imagination towards drollery. His
-picture, however, of Richard <span class="fs80">III.</span> is pure and unmixed,
-without any ridiculous circumstances, and strongly
-impresses terror and amazement."</p>
-
-<p>On the publication of this criticism, Hogarth engraved
-the whole quotation under the two prints
-alluded to without any comment; but on the appearance
-of the following very ample and candid
-apology, erased them:&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>"The author gladly lays hold of the opportunity
-of this third edition of his work to confess a mistake
-he had committed with respect to two admirable
-paintings of Mr. Hogarth,&mdash;his Paul Preaching, and
-his Infant Moses,&mdash;which on a closer examination are
-not chargeable with the blemishes imputed to them.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_80" id="Page_80">[80]</a></span>
-Justice obliges him to declare the high opinion he
-entertains of the abilities of this inimitable artist, who
-shines in so many different lights and on such very
-dissimilar subjects, and whose works have more of
-what the ancients called the <span title="ÊThOS">ΗΘΟΣ</span> in them than the
-compositions of any other modern. For the rest, the
-author begs leave to add, that he is so far from being
-ashamed of retracting his error, that he had rather
-appear a man of candour than the best critic that
-ever lived."</p>
-
-<p>Hogarth did not understand Greek, and was for
-some time doubtful whether the <span title="ÊThOS">ΗΘΟΣ</span> was meant as
-complimentary or satirical.</p>
-
-<p>If the original painting in Lincoln's-Inn Hall were
-destroyed, Hogarth's reputation would not be diminished.</p>
-
-<p class="p4" />
-<div class="figcenter">
-<img src="images/end_080.jpg" alt="" />
-</div>
-
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_81" id="Page_81">[81]</a></span></p>
-
-<h3>MOSES BEFORE PHARAOH'S DAUGHTER.</h3>
-
-<p class="fs90">"And the child grew, and she brought him unto Pharaoh's daughter,
-and he became her son. And she called his name Moses."&mdash;<span class="smcap">Exodus
-ii. 10.</span></p>
-
-<p class="p2" />
-<div class="figcenter">
-<a name="MP" id="MP"></a>
-<img src="images/i_082fp.jpg" width="650" alt="" />
-<div class="caption">MOSES BEFORE PHARAOH'S DAUGHTER.</div>
-</div>
-
-<div>
-<img class="drop-cap" src="images/dc_081.jpg" alt="" />
-</div>
-
-<p class="drop-capx">Among the many benevolent institutions
-which do honour to this nation, the hospital
-for maintaining exposed and deserted
-infants may be ranked as one of the most humane
-and political. Let the austere enthusiast censure it
-as an encouragement to vice, and the rigid moralist
-declaim against giving sanction to profligacy, it is still
-an useful and a benevolent foundation.</p>
-
-<p>To protect the helpless, give refuge to the innocent,
-and render that unoffending being a useful member
-of society whose parents may be too indigent to give
-it proper sustenance, or wicked enough to destroy it,
-is fulfilling one great precept of religion, and must
-afford a pure and exalted gratification to every
-philanthropic mind.<a name="FNanchor_53_53" id="FNanchor_53_53"></a><a href="#Footnote_53_53" class="fnanchor">[53]</a></p>
-
-<p>That it is found necessary to restrict the plan, and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_82" id="Page_82">[82]</a></span>
-confine the charity in such narrow limits, is much to
-be lamented. Compassion and policy demand that
-the doors should be open to every proper object.</p>
-
-<p>To this asylum for deserted infancy Mr. Hogarth
-was one of the earliest benefactors,<a name="FNanchor_54_54" id="FNanchor_54_54"></a><a href="#Footnote_54_54" class="fnanchor">[54]</a> and to their
-institution presented the picture from which this print
-is engraved; there is not perhaps in holy writ another
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_83" id="Page_83">[83]</a></span>story so exactly suitable to the avowed purpose of
-the foundation.</p>
-
-<p>The history of Moses being deserted by his mother,
-exposed among the bulrushes, and discovered and
-protected by the daughter of Pharaoh, is known to
-every one who has read the Bible: those who have
-not, may find it there recorded, with many other
-things well worthy their attention. At the point of
-time here taken, the child's mother, whom the Princess
-considers as merely its nurse, has brought him to his
-patroness, and is receiving from the treasurer the
-wages of her services. The little foundling naturally
-clings to his nurse, though invited to leave her by the
-daughter of a monarch. The eyes of an attendant,
-and a whispering Ethiopian, convey an oblique suspicion
-that the child has a nearer affinity to their
-mistress than she chooses to acknowledge.<a name="FNanchor_55_55" id="FNanchor_55_55"></a><a href="#Footnote_55_55" class="fnanchor">[55]</a></p>
-
-<p>Considered as a whole, this picture has a more
-historic air than we often find in the works of Hogarth.
-The royal Egyptian is graceful, and in some degree
-elevated.<a name="FNanchor_56_56" id="FNanchor_56_56"></a><a href="#Footnote_56_56" class="fnanchor">[56]</a> The treasurer is marked with austere
-dignity, and the Jewess and child with nature. The
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_84" id="Page_84">[84]</a></span>scene is superb, and the distant prospect of pyramids,
-etc. highly picturesque and appropriate to the country.
-To exhibit this scene, the artist has placed the
-groups at such a distance as crowd the corners and
-leave the centre unoccupied. As the Greeks are said
-to have received the rudiments of art from Egypt,
-the line of beauty on the base of a pillar is properly
-introduced. A crocodile creeping from under the
-stately chair may be intended to mark the neighbourhood
-of the Nile, but is a poor and forced conceit.</p>
-
-<p class="p4" />
-<div class="figcenter">
-<img src="images/end_084.jpg" alt="" />
-</div>
-
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_85" id="Page_85">[85]</a></span></p>
-
-<h3>FOUR PRINTS OF AN ELECTION.</h3>
-
-<div>
-<img class="drop-cap" src="images/dc_085.jpg" alt="" />
-</div>
-
-<p class="drop-cap">I think it is Voltaire who observes that the
-English nation are mad every seven years:
-he might have added that there are local
-fits which seize some parts of the country at other
-times; but this madness, like the fermentation of
-liquors, proves the spirit of the people.</p>
-
-<p>In the following series of prints Mr. Hogarth has
-delineated the progress of this malady, in four of its
-most remarkable stages, with that broad and characteristic
-humour peculiar to himself. He has presented
-us with the mirror of a contested election, the British
-Saturnalia; in which is displayed what Abbé Raynal
-most emphatically calls "the majesty of the people!"&mdash;an
-expression, says the same writer, "which would
-alone consecrate a language."</p>
-
-<p>The first print was published February 24, 1755,
-and inscribed to the Right Hon. Henry Fox.&mdash;Plate
-II., February 20, 1757, to Sir Charles Hanbury Williams,
-Ambassador to the Court of Russia.&mdash;Plate
-III., February 20, 1758, to the Hon. Sir Edward
-Walpole, Knight of the Bath.&mdash;Plate IV., January 1,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_86" id="Page_86">[86]</a></span>
-1759, to the Hon. George Hay, one of the Lords
-Commissioners of the Admiralty.</p>
-
-<p>The original pictures are now in the possession of
-Mrs. Garrick, at Hampton.</p>
-
-<p>It appears from the <cite>Grub Street Journal</cite> of June
-13, 1734, that the same subject had been previously
-attempted by another artist, under the title of "The
-Humours of a Country Election." It must be acknowledged
-that the inscriptions to some of the compartments
-have a striking similarity to the scenes
-represented by Hogarth. "The candidates very
-complaisant to a country clown," etc. "The candidates
-making an entertainment for the electors and
-their wives; at the upper end of the table the parson
-of the parish," etc.</p>
-
-<p>In 1759 was published, in four cantos, a poetical
-description of these prints, introduced by the following
-remarkable advertisement, dated</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-<p class="right">"<span class="smcap">Cheapside</span>, <em>March 1, 1759</em>.</p>
-
-<p>"For the satisfaction of the reader, and in justice to
-the concealed author, I take the liberty, with the permission
-of Mr. Hogarth, to insert in this manner that
-gentleman's opinion of the following cantos, which is&mdash;That
-the thoughts entirely coincide with his own;
-that there is a well-adapted vein of humour preserved
-through the whole; and that though some of his
-works have been formerly explained by other hands,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_87" id="Page_87">[87]</a></span>
-yet none ever gave him so much satisfaction as the
-present performance.</p>
-
-<p class="right smcap">"John Smith."</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>Had Mr. Hogarth's taste for poetry been in any
-degree equal to his skill in painting, he would scarcely
-have given so strong a sanction to this wretched attempt
-at Hudibrastic humour, which is coarse, dull,
-mean, and very unworthy of the scenes which it professes
-to celebrate.<a name="FNanchor_57_57" id="FNanchor_57_57"></a><a href="#Footnote_57_57" class="fnanchor">[57]</a></p>
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_88" id="Page_88">[88]</a></span></p>
-
-
-<p class="p2" />
-<h4>PLATE I.</h4>
-
-<p class="pfs70">AN ELECTION ENTERTAINMENT.</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container"><div class="poetry">
-<p class="verseq">"Here tumult wild and rude confusion reign,</p>
-<p class="verse">And hoodwink'd party heads the senseless train;</p>
-<p class="verse">Here meets her motley tribe&mdash;here holds her court,</p>
-<p class="verse">For pamper'd Gluttony, the grand resort.</p>
-<p class="verse">From orgies so profane&mdash;stern Freedom flown,</p>
-<p class="verse">Corruption mounts her abdicated throne.</p>
-<p class="verse">Unhappy Britain&mdash;thy degenerate tribe,</p>
-<p class="verse">Like Esau, barter birthright for a bribe."&mdash;E.</p>
-</div></div>
-
-<p class="p2" />
-<div class="figcenter">
-<a name="EL_I" id="EL_I"></a>
-<img src="images/i_088fp.jpg" width="650" alt="" />
-<div class="caption">THE ELECTION, PLATE I. THE ENTERTAINMENT.</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class="noindent">The first act of this popular farce is very properly a
-dinner, which in all public transactions ought to precede
-every other business.<a name="FNanchor_58_58" id="FNanchor_58_58"></a><a href="#Footnote_58_58" class="fnanchor">[58]</a> The scene is laid in a
-country town, at an inn, which in these piping times
-of peace is kept open for the friends of the Court
-candidate. All the party, except the divine and the
-mayor, have ended their repast; but episcopal dignity,
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_89" id="Page_89">[89]</a></span>or prætorian distinction, gives a right to more indulgence
-than is allowed to the unhallowed multitude.</p>
-
-<p>The highly polished and accomplished gentleman<a name="FNanchor_59_59" id="FNanchor_59_59"></a><a href="#Footnote_59_59" class="fnanchor">[59]</a>
-who aspires to the honour of a seat in the British
-senate demands our first notice. He has what an
-Hibernian would call a face of much promise. His
-dress, air, and grace proclaim that he has travelled.
-Pope has described him exactly as if he had sat for
-the picture:</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container"><div class="poetry">
-<p class="verse8">"He saunter'd Europe round,</p>
-<p class="verse">And gathered every vice on Christian ground,</p>
-<p class="verse">Saw every court, heard every king declare</p>
-<p class="verse">His royal sense of operas, or the fair.&mdash;</p>
-<p class="verse">See now half-cured, and perfectly well-bred,</p>
-<p class="verse">With nothing but a solo in his head,</p>
-<p class="verse">As much estate, and principle, and wit,</p>
-<p class="verse">As Jansen, Fleetwood, Cibber, shall think fit;</p>
-<p class="verse">Stol'n from a duel, follow'd by a nun,</p>
-<p class="verse">And if a Borough choose him,&mdash;not undone," etc.</p>
-</div></div>
-
-<p>At this time of general equality and universal<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_90" id="Page_90">[90]</a></span>
-levelling, when knight and vassal, esquire and mechanic,
-are of equal rank, our paragon of politeness is
-lending an attentive ear to a disgusting old beldam,
-who from her rotundity may be a descendant of Sir
-John Falstaff's. In her hand, which is behind him,
-she holds a letter directed to Sir Commodity Taxem;
-this we may naturally suppose contains either a
-request of a favour or an offer of a service, in the sure
-and certain hope of a return to it. Be that as it may,
-the gallant knight shows her every attention, and has
-stretched his long arm half round her ample waist:</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container"><div class="poetry">
-<p class="verseq">"Thus the bold eagle leaves his azure way,</p>
-<p class="verse">And takes the carrion carcase for his prey;</p>
-<p class="verse">There dips his beak&mdash;but when the banquet's done,</p>
-<p class="verse">Replumes his wings, and rises to the sun."</p>
-</div></div>
-
-<p>While a little girl dazzled with the splendour of his
-brilliant ring attempts to make it a prize, a fellow
-who stands upon a chair behind him, with all that
-easy familiarity which the time warrants, strikes the
-Baronet's head against that of the old woman, and
-shakes the ashes out of his tobacco-pipe upon his
-powdered hair. This is election wit.</p>
-
-<p>The next group form a trio, and are made up by a
-grinning cobbler, a dirty-faced barber, and a mawkish
-gentleman, whose hand the son of St. Crispin grasps
-with an energy that almost cracks the bones. The
-barber, equally friendly, pinches his arm, and resting<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_91" id="Page_91">[91]</a></span>
-one hand upon his shoulder blows the hot fumes from
-a short tobacco-pipe into his eye. This also is
-election wit.</p>
-
-<p>A pyramidical group behind is composed of an
-officer, a drunken counsellor, and a pleasing young
-woman, over whose head the maudlin advocate,
-flourishing a bumper of wine, roars out an obscene
-toast. This is the third and most finished specimen
-of election wit. At a table a little beneath, stewing
-"the last lov'd remnant of the forest haunch," sits an
-oily divine,<a name="FNanchor_60_60" id="FNanchor_60_60"></a><a href="#Footnote_60_60" class="fnanchor">[60]</a> holding his canonical periwig in his
-right hand, and wiping his forehead with the left.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_92" id="Page_92">[92]</a></span>
-Behind him is a Scotch bagpiper, who, at the same
-time that he is pressing out his harsh and unmusical
-tones, enjoys the <em>royal</em> luxury of scratching.<a name="FNanchor_61_61" id="FNanchor_61_61"></a><a href="#Footnote_61_61" class="fnanchor">[61]</a> A
-female player on the violin,<a name="FNanchor_62_62" id="FNanchor_62_62"></a><a href="#Footnote_62_62" class="fnanchor">[62]</a> and a most consequential
-performer on the bass viol, when aided by the Caledonian
-pipe, must form a most melodious concert.</p>
-
-<p>A fourth votary of St. Cecilia holds his musical instrument
-under his arm, ceasing all dulcet sounds,
-while he drinks a glass of Burgundy with a gentleman
-who seems much gratified at seeing a chin of more
-extravagant length than his own. Adjoining are two
-country fellows delighted beyond measure at a person<a name="FNanchor_63_63" id="FNanchor_63_63"></a><a href="#Footnote_63_63" class="fnanchor">[63]</a>
-making the representation of a face by wrapping
-a napkin round his hand, and singing, "An old woman
-clothed in grey," etc. This face, ingeniously designed
-with charcoal blots for eyes and mouth, bears a
-strong resemblance to the poor gouty old fellow on
-his left hand, whose violent contortions lead us to
-suspect that he feels some disagreeable internal
-emotion. Behind, is a fellow pouring the contents of
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_93" id="Page_93">[93]</a></span>a vessel through a window amongst a crowd made up
-of the opposite party, in return for a shower of stones
-they are hurling into the room. To annoy and repel
-these troublesome assailants, a man at the opposite
-corner throws out a three-legged stool. At the upper
-end of the table sits a gentleman in a tye-wig, whom
-we presume to be the Right Worshipful Mr. Mayor.
-He has ate oysters until his breath is stopped, and
-is now under the hands of a barber-surgeon. This
-village <em>Sangrado</em> attempts to breathe a vein; "But
-ah! the purple tide no more will flow."</p>
-
-<p>Notwithstanding this suspension of vital powers,
-our absolute monarch of his own corporation, true to
-the cause, and actuated by his ruling passion, even in
-death, grasps a fork, on which he has impaled an
-oyster. Immediately behind him an electioneering
-agent offers a bribe to a puritanic tailor; but this
-conscientious wielder of the needle, lifting up his eyes
-with horror, refuses the money, maugre the terrific
-threats of his <em>amiable</em> wife, who, while she raises her
-right fist in a menacing style, rests her left hand on
-the head of their barefooted boy.</p>
-
-<p>On an opposite chair is an unfortunate man of the
-law, who, intent on casting up the sure and doubtful
-votes, is, like the mighty Goliah, struck in the forehead
-with a stone, and falls prostrate to the floor.
-"Where be his quirks and quiddits now?"</p>
-
-<p>A champion of the same party, generally called a<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_94" id="Page_94">[94]</a></span>
-bludgeon-man,<a name="FNanchor_64_64" id="FNanchor_64_64"></a><a href="#Footnote_64_64" class="fnanchor">[64]</a> having met with a similar accident
-in the cause of his country, is taken in hand by a
-patriotic butcher, who, assuming the office of surgeon,
-pours gin into the wound. A little boy filling a
-mashing-tub with punch,<a name="FNanchor_65_65" id="FNanchor_65_65"></a><a href="#Footnote_65_65" class="fnanchor">[65]</a> and a trading Quaker reading
-a promissory note, conclude the catalogue. This
-note is from the candidate to Mr. Abel Squat for
-fifty pounds, payable six months after date, and
-probably offered in payment for ribands, gloves, etc.,
-which are to be presented to the electors' wives and
-daughters. With this note honest Abel is much
-dissatisfied; and by the manner one hand is laid upon
-his little bale of goods, it does not seem probable that
-he will part with them for paper security.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_95" id="Page_95">[95]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Coming in at the door we see a band of assailants
-from the opposite party, determined to attack the
-enemy in their entrenchments; most of them flourish
-their cudgels, but one of the heroes brandishes a
-sword. The stag's horns over the door may perhaps
-be intended to convey some allusion to the trembling
-Puritan. A party, whom their enemies at that time
-distinguished by the name of Jacobites, to show <em>their</em>
-respect for Revolution principles, have mangled the
-portrait of King William the Third. The escutcheon
-with the Elector's arms, <span class="fs80">A CHEVRON SABLE BETWEEN
-THREE GUINEAS OR</span>, with the crest of a gaping mouth,
-and motto "Speak and Have," is very applicable to a
-parliamentary canvas. The landscape over the candidate's
-head may, it has been observed, be intended
-as a representation of the town where this business
-is transacting. On the flag, which is entwined with
-laurels, is inscribed "Liberty and Loyalty," which
-cabalistic words, like the Abracadabra, are a sort of
-charm to the eyes of your Englishman. On another
-flag, which lies upon the ground, is written, "Give
-us our Eleven Days."<a name="FNanchor_66_66" id="FNanchor_66_66"></a><a href="#Footnote_66_66" class="fnanchor">[66]</a> In the tobacco tray is a paper
-of Kirton's best,<a name="FNanchor_67_67" id="FNanchor_67_67"></a><a href="#Footnote_67_67" class="fnanchor">[67]</a> and a slip from the Act against
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_96" id="Page_96">[96]</a></span>Bribery and Corruption is torn to light pipes with.
-A lobster appears to be creeping towards a mutton
-chop, which lies unheeded in a corner. A procession
-in the street are following an effigy,<a name="FNanchor_68_68" id="FNanchor_68_68"></a><a href="#Footnote_68_68" class="fnanchor">[68]</a> on the breast
-of which is inscribed, "No Jews." The mottoes on
-their flags are equally curious: "Liberty and Property,
-and no Excise;" and, "Marry and Multiply,
-in spite of the devil."</p>
-
-<p>An inscription on the butcher's cockade is infinitely
-more classical and elegant: "Pro Patriæ" has a chance
-of general admiration, because it is not generally
-understood.</p>
-
-<p>As to the characters of the <i lang="la" xml:lang="la">dramatis personæ</i>.
-The face and air of the Baronet are perfectly of
-Lord Chesterfield's school; a fellow scattering
-ashes on his head, and the cobbler at the table,
-are marked with mischief. The fat old woman is
-of Mother Cole's family; and the divine has the
-corpulence and consequence of a bishop. He must
-"lard the lean earth as he walks along." The two
-country fellows looking with delighted eyes at Mr.
-Parnell, and an old man tortured by the gout, are
-admirably discriminated. The barber-surgeon and
-his brother butcher have so much <i lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">sang froid</i>, and
-display so little feeling for their suffering patients,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_97" id="Page_97">[97]</a></span>
-that we naturally infer each of them is in great
-practice.</p>
-
-<p>Hogarth was fond of making experiments; and
-it has been said, that when engraving this plate he
-determined to attempt what no artist had ever performed,
-<em>i.e.</em> to finish the plate without taking a single
-proof during the process. The consequence was such
-as might be expected; he made some mistakes that
-it was scarcely possible to rectify, and on discovering
-the errors, violently exclaimed that he was ruined.
-On his passion subsiding, a brother engraver assisted
-him to correct the faults occasioned by trying to
-perform an impossibility. It is, however, the highest
-finished print he ever engraved.</p>
-
-<p>In the first state of the plate were some lemons
-and oranges lying on a paper by the side of the tub;
-but Hogarth being informed that vitriol and cream
-of tartar are the usual acids in election punch, erased
-them from the copper.</p>
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_98" id="Page_98">[98]</a></span></p>
-
-<p class="p2" />
-<h4>PLATE II.</h4>
-
-<p class="pfs70">CANVASSING FOR VOTES.</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container"><div class="poetry">
-<p class="verseq">"Although bare merit might in Rome appear</p>
-<p class="verse">The strongest plea for favour,&mdash;'tis not here;</p>
-<p class="verse">We form our judgment in another way,</p>
-<p class="verse">And he will best succeed who best can pay."</p>
-</div></div>
-
-<p class="p2" />
-<div class="figcenter">
-<a name="EL_II" id="EL_II"></a>
-<img src="images/i_098fp.jpg" width="650" alt="" />
-<div class="caption">THE ELECTION, PLATE II. CANVASSING FOR VOTES.</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class="noindent">The centre group in this print represents a rustic
-freeholder between two innkeepers, each of whom,
-as agents for their respective parties, are dropping
-money into his hands. From the arch and significant
-cast of his eye, we see that though interest induces
-him to take all that either of them will give, <em>conscience</em>
-obliges him to vote for the best paymaster.<a name="FNanchor_69_69" id="FNanchor_69_69"></a><a href="#Footnote_69_69" class="fnanchor">[69]</a>
-One of the candidates, considering how necessary it
-is to conciliate the favour of the fair, is purchasing
-trinkets from a Jew pedlar for two ladies, who express
-their virtuous wishes in a balcony. Though neither
-of them have votes, their interest may be very extensive.
-By the direction upon a letter which a porter,
-in the hope of a more liberal gratuity, delivers with a
-bended knee, we perceive that this gentleman is of
-the numerous and ancient family of the party tools,
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_99" id="Page_99">[99]</a></span>who have flourished in this island ever since the
-Revolution. A packet on the ground consists of
-printed bills to be dispersed among the electors, intimating
-that Punch's theatre is opened,<a name="FNanchor_70_70" id="FNanchor_70_70"></a><a href="#Footnote_70_70" class="fnanchor">[70]</a> the company
-of the worthy electors humbly<a name="FNanchor_71_71" id="FNanchor_71_71"></a><a href="#Footnote_71_71" class="fnanchor">[71]</a> and earnestly requested,
-etc. etc. In election business, eating is a
-leading article; of this, two hungry countrymen in
-the Royal Oak larder seem perfectly sensible. One
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_100" id="Page_100">[100]</a></span>of them is voraciously devouring a fowl, and the other
-slashing away a round of beef. Seated upon an old
-stern of a ship, which is placed as a kind of national
-trophy at the inn door, and represents the British lion
-swallowing the lily of France, is the buxom landlady
-(at this time a very important personage), counting
-the money she has received for <em>her</em> interest in the
-borough; a grenadier watches her with that kind of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_101" id="Page_101">[101]</a></span>
-eagerness which seems to intimate a desire of dividing
-the spoil. Settling the nation while they drink their
-ale, a barber and a cobbler are engaged in a dispute
-upon politics at the door of the Portobello<a name="FNanchor_72_72" id="FNanchor_72_72"></a><a href="#Footnote_72_72" class="fnanchor">[72]</a> alehouse.
-The former seems describing, with pieces of broken
-tobacco-pipes, the great exploits of Admiral Vernon
-with six ships only. In the progress of this voluble
-harangue he has advanced something contrary to the
-cobbler's creed, and Crispin, being no great orator,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_102" id="Page_102">[102]</a></span>
-offers to back his opinion by a wager. This the
-eloquent flourisher of a razor is either unwilling or
-unable to answer, and the self-important mender of
-bad soles triumphantly sweeps his cash from the table
-to his pocket. A fellow mounted on a cross-beam at
-the end of the Crown signpost deserves particular
-notice. Eagerly exercising his hand-saw, he strains
-every nerve to cut through the beam, totally negligent
-of his own situation, and forgetting that when
-the Crown drops&mdash;he must fall. To accelerate this
-operation, and bring the business to a more speedy
-crisis, two zealous coadjutors are exerting all their
-strength in pulling at a rope which is tied round the
-beam. This is one of the neatest pieces of allegory
-that Hogarth has delineated.</p>
-
-<p>The crowd beneath are a fair representation of what
-we had occasion to notice before&mdash;the majesty of the
-people. Delighting in devastation, and blind to its
-consequences, they with one voice "cry havoc, and
-let slip the dogs of war." The landlord, enraged at
-this wanton attack upon his <em>castle</em>, opens his window
-and discharges a blunderbuss amongst the assailants.
-Painted on the upper part of a show-cloth, and hung
-before the sign of the Royal Oak,<a name="FNanchor_73_73" id="FNanchor_73_73"></a><a href="#Footnote_73_73" class="fnanchor">[73]</a> is a view of the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_103" id="Page_103">[103]</a></span>
-Treasury, out of which a stream of gold is poured into
-a bag, which, when filled, will be hoisted into a large
-waggon now loading with guineas to defray the expense
-of the approaching elections. Next to this is a
-view of that <em>solid</em> specimen of Mr. Ware's taste and
-talents in architecture, the Horse Guards. To the
-cupola of this ponderous pile the artist has, with
-very little exaggeration, given the form of a beer
-barrel. In the centre arch the builder forgot proportion
-and neglected utility, so that the state coach
-could not pass through until the ground was lowered.
-To satirize this violation of the laws of Palladio, and
-inattention to the dictates of common sense, Hogarth
-has represented the royal carriage on the point of
-entering the arch, and the king's <em>body-coachman</em> without
-a head.<a name="FNanchor_74_74" id="FNanchor_74_74"></a><a href="#Footnote_74_74" class="fnanchor">[74]</a> Beneath is delineated that ancient
-favourite of a puppet-show, the facetious Mr. Punch,
-with a barrow full of guineas, which, with a wooden
-ladle, he tosses up and scatters in the air, to the
-great delight of two sylvan freeholders who attempt<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_104" id="Page_104">[104]</a></span>
-to catch them in their hats. One of these <em>simple</em>
-swains,<a name="FNanchor_75_75" id="FNanchor_75_75"></a><a href="#Footnote_75_75" class="fnanchor">[75]</a> having had his head broken with the gold,
-endeavours to guard his <em>caput</em> from future mishaps.
-An old woman standing behind them with a magic
-wand, I suppose to be Mrs. Punch. Underneath is a
-very applicable inscription, "Punch, a candidate for
-Guzzledown." A view in the background, between
-the Crown and Portobello, of a cottage embosomed<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_105" id="Page_105">[105]</a></span>
-in a wood, and a village in the distance, is highly
-picturesque. The tree, which spreads its foliage
-before the walls of the Royal Oak, has one withered
-bough; and enveloped by the luxuriant branches of
-a vine, hangs a wooden bunch of grapes.</p>
-
-<p>The characters are admirable. Nothing can be
-superior to the haughty and oracular self-importance
-of the cobbler; the barber has all his professional
-volubility; and the leer of the countryman lets you
-into his whole soul. It is evidently directed to mine
-host of the Oak,<a name="FNanchor_76_76" id="FNanchor_76_76"></a><a href="#Footnote_76_76" class="fnanchor">[76]</a> who, added to his superior weight
-of <em>metal</em>, has a superior weight of body, and a much
-more persuasive aspect. The Jew has the true countenance
-of his tribe. Of his customer, we may say in
-the language of Shylock,</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container"><div class="poetry">
-<p class="verse">"How like a fawning publican he looks!"</p>
-</div></div>
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_106" id="Page_106">[106]</a></span></p>
-
-<p class="p2" />
-<h4>PLATE III.</h4>
-
-<p class="pfs70">THE POLLING.</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container"><div class="poetry">
-<p class="verseq">"Time was,&mdash;our freeholders, a stout rustic band,</p>
-<p class="verse">Inhal'd the fresh breeze as they till'd their own land;</p>
-<p class="verse">Their hearts beam'd with honour, their faces with health,</p>
-<p class="verse">Their toil gave them strength, and their diligence wealth.</p>
-<p class="verse">But these sons of misery, disfranchis'd by fate,</p>
-<p class="verse">Resemble a group at an hospital gate,</p>
-<p class="verse">All huddled together in one little clan,</p>
-<p class="verse">To display the calamities common to man.</p>
-<p class="verse">Yet deaf, blind, or lame, we must trust to their choice;</p>
-<p class="verse"><em>Sans</em> ears, eyes, or hands,&mdash;each may have a good voice.</p>
-<p class="verse">And&mdash;gasping for breath,&mdash;it deserves special note,</p>
-<p class="verse">The <em>expiring Elector</em> is deem'd a <em>dead vote</em>."&mdash;E.</p>
-</div></div>
-
-<p class="p2" />
-<div class="figcenter">
-<a name="EL_III" id="EL_III"></a>
-<img src="images/i_106fp.jpg" width="650" alt="" />
-<div class="caption">THE ELECTION, PLATE III. THE POLLING.</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class="noindent">With the glorious ambition of serving their country,
-added to an eagerness of displaying their own importance,
-the maimed, the lame, the blind, the deaf, and
-the sick, hasten to the hustings to give their <em>independent</em>
-votes.<a name="FNanchor_77_77" id="FNanchor_77_77"></a><a href="#Footnote_77_77" class="fnanchor">[77]</a> The contending candidates, seated at the
-back of the booth, anticipate the event. One of them,
-coolly resting upon his cane in a state of stupid
-satisfaction, appears to be as happy as his nature will
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_107" id="Page_107">[107]</a></span>admit, in the certainty of success. Very different are
-the feelings of his opponent, who, rubbing his head
-with every mark of apprehensive agitation, contemplates
-the state of the poll, and shudders at the heavy
-expense of a contest in which he is likely to be the
-loser. Such are the cares of a candidate.</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container"><div class="poetry">
-<p class="verseq">"A man, when once he's safely chose,</p>
-<p class="verse">May laugh at all his furious foes,</p>
-<p class="verse4">Nor think of former evil:</p>
-<p class="verse">Yet good has its attendant ill,</p>
-<p class="verse">A seat is no bad thing,&mdash;but still,</p>
-<p class="verse4">A contest is the Devil."</p>
-</div></div>
-
-<p>The first person that tenders his oath to the swearing
-clerk is an old soldier, and probably a brave one,
-for he has lost a leg, an arm, and a hand, in the
-service of his country. They were severed by the
-sword of an enemy, but the trunk and heart remain
-entire, and are entitled to more respect than is paid
-them by the brawling advocate, who, with that loud
-and overbearing loquacity for which Billingsgate and
-the bar are so deservedly eminent, puts in a protest
-against his vote. The objection is not founded upon
-this heroic remnant of war having forfeited his franchise<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_108" id="Page_108">[108]</a></span>
-by any improper conduct, but upon the letter,
-the black letter of the law, "which," says our quibbling
-counsellor, "ordains, 'that the person who
-makes an affidavit shall lay his right hand upon the
-book.' Now, this man having had his right hand
-severed from his arm, and, as he informs us, left it in
-Flanders, cannot comply with the letter of the law,
-and therefore is not competent to make an affidavit;
-that being once admitted, which I do contend must
-be admitted, he cannot be deemed competent to
-vote." "That," replies another gentleman of the
-black robe, "I most pointedly deny; for though this
-valiant veteran, who is an half-pay officer, has lost
-much of his blood and three of his limbs in the
-service of his king, and defence of his fellow-subjects,
-yet the sword which deprived him of his hand has
-not deprived him of his birthright. God forbid it
-should! It might as well be argued and asserted,
-that this gentleman is excluded from the rites of
-matrimony because he cannot pledge his hand.
-Thanks to our religion and our constitution, neither
-law nor gospel holds such language, and it is beneath
-me to waste any more words in the confutation of it.
-I will only add,&mdash;and I do insist upon my opinion
-being confirmed by every statute upon the case,&mdash;that
-the law must and will consider this substitute for a
-hand to be as good as the hand itself; and his laying
-that upon the book is all which the law ought to<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_109" id="Page_109">[109]</a></span>
-require,&mdash;all the law can require,&mdash;all the law does
-require."</p>
-
-<p>Leaving these two bright luminaries of their profession
-to throw dust, and render that obscure which
-without their explanation would have been perfectly
-clear, let us attend to the son of Solomon, who is
-fastened in his chair and brought to give his voice
-for a fit person to represent <em>him</em> in Parliament. This
-is evidently a deaf idiot, but he is attended by a man
-in fetters,<a name="FNanchor_78_78" id="FNanchor_78_78"></a><a href="#Footnote_78_78" class="fnanchor">[78]</a> very capable of prompting him, who is at
-this moment roaring in his ear the name of the
-gentleman for whom he is to vote. Behind him are
-two fellows carrying a man wrapped in a blanket,
-apparently in so languid a state, that he cannot be
-supposed to feel much interest in the concerns of a
-world he is on the point of leaving.<a name="FNanchor_79_79" id="FNanchor_79_79"></a><a href="#Footnote_79_79" class="fnanchor">[79]</a> The catalogue
-of this motley group of electors is concluded by a
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_110" id="Page_110">[110]</a></span>blind man and a cripple, who are slowly and cautiously
-ascending the steps that lead to the hustings.
-In the group an artist is drawing a profile of one of
-the candidates, and in both air and character this
-Sayers of his day has given a very striking resemblance
-of his original. The constable, fatigued by
-double duty, is at peace with all mankind&mdash;a deep
-sleep is upon him. Many of the crowd are attentively
-listening to the soft sounds of a female siren, warbling
-forth a brown paper libel on one of the candidates in
-that universal language which those that cannot read
-may yet understand,&mdash;the hero of this satire being
-delineated as suspended to a gibbet on the top of the
-ballad.</p>
-
-<p>In the sinister corner is a view of Britannia's
-chariot oversetting, while the coachman and footman
-are playing at cards on the box. Here is one of the
-few instances where Hogarth has mounted into the
-cloudy heights of allegory; and here, as Mr. Walpole
-justly observes, he is not happy: it is a dark and
-dangerous region, in which almost every aeronaut of
-the arts has lost himself, and confused his earth-born
-admirers. On a bridge in the background is a
-carriage, with colours flying, and a cavalcade composed
-of worthy and independent freeholders advancing
-to give their suffrages with all possible <i lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">éclat</i>.</p>
-
-<p>The village in the distance has a pretty effect. Of
-the church we may fairly say, as Charles the Second<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_111" id="Page_111">[111]</a></span>
-did of that at Harrow on the Hill, "It is the <em>visible</em>
-church."</p>
-
-<p>Part of this plate was engraved by Morrilon le
-Cave, who was a scholar of Picart's. In the year
-1733, he engraved from Hogarth's design a small
-print of Captain Coram, etc., as the headpiece to a
-power of attorney for the Governors of the Foundling
-Hospital: he also engraved a head of Doctor Pococke,
-which is the frontispiece to Twell's edition of the
-Doctor's works.</p>
-
-
-<p class="p2" />
-<h4>PLATE IV.</h4>
-
-<p class="pfs70">CHAIRING THE MEMBER.</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container"><div class="poetry">
-<p class="verse">When Philip's warlike and victorious son</p>
-<p class="verse">A kingdom conquer'd or a battle won,</p>
-<p class="verse">His legions bow'd the head, and bent the knee,</p>
-<p class="verse">And cried, exulting,&mdash;Lo, a Deity!</p>
-<p class="verse">Bore him triumphant in a glittering car,</p>
-<p class="verse">While thundering plaudits rent the echoing air.</p>
-<p class="verse4">So,&mdash;the Election being finish'd,</p>
-<p class="verse">His borough gain'd, his coin diminish'd,</p>
-<p class="verse">Our Knight in mock heroic state</p>
-<p class="verse">Is now exalted,&mdash;but not great.</p>
-<p class="verse4">Beyond all doubt the people's choice,</p>
-<p class="verse">Ah!&mdash;could he check the people's voice?</p>
-<p class="verse">For some exclaim,&mdash;A venal knave!</p>
-<p class="verse">And others,&mdash;A time-serving slave!</p>
-<p class="verse">While this roars out,&mdash;A party tool!</p>
-<p class="verse">That, sneering cries,&mdash;A party fool!</p>
-<p class="verse4">These are hard words, and grating tones;</p>
-<p class="verse">But what are words to broken bones?</p>
-<p class="verse">And broken bones he'll soon bewail,</p>
-<p class="verse">For there's no fence against a flail.</p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_112" id="Page_112">[112]</a></span>
-<p class="verse">Oh hapless wight!&mdash;ah, luckless fray,</p>
-<p class="verse">Down drops this pageant of the day.</p>
-<p class="verse4">Thus, he most raised above his fellows,</p>
-<p class="verse">By one rude blast from Fortune's bellows,</p>
-<p class="verse">Falls, like a tempest-riven tower,</p>
-<p class="verse">From pomp, pride, circumstance, and power.&mdash;E.</p>
-</div></div>
-
-<p class="p2" />
-<div class="figcenter">
-<a name="EL_IV" id="EL_IV"></a>
-<img src="images/i_112fp.jpg" width="650" alt="" />
-<div class="caption">THE ELECTION, PLATE IV. CHAIRING THE MEMBERS.</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class="noindent">The polling being concluded, the books cast up, and
-the returning-officer having declared our candidate<a name="FNanchor_80_80" id="FNanchor_80_80"></a><a href="#Footnote_80_80" class="fnanchor">[80]</a>
-duly elected, he is now exhibited in triumph. Seated
-in an arm-chair, and exalted upon the shoulders of
-four tried supporters of the constitution, he is borne
-through the principal streets, which are promiscuously
-crowded with enemies as well as friends. In this
-aerostatic voyage there seems to be some danger of
-a wreck; for a thresher having received an insult from
-a sailor, in the act of revenging it flourishes his flail
-in as extensive an orbit as if he were in his own
-barn. The end of this destructive instrument coming
-in contact with the skull of a bearer of our new-made
-member, the fellow's head rings with the blow, his
-eyes swim, his limbs refuse their office, and at this
-inauspicious moment the effects of the stroke, like an
-electric shock, extend to the exalted senator. He
-trembles in every joint; the hat flies from his head&mdash;and&mdash;without
-the intervention of Juno or Minerva,
-he must fall from the seat of honour to the bed of
-stone. Terrified at his impending danger, a nervous
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_113" id="Page_113">[113]</a></span>lady, who with her attendants is in the churchyard,
-falls back in a swoon. Regardless of her distress, two
-little chimney-sweepers upon the gate-post are placing
-a pair of gingerbread spectacles on a death's head.
-Their sportive tricks are likely to be interrupted by
-a monkey beneath, who, arrayed <i lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">en militaire</i>, is
-mounted upon a bear's back. The firelock slung
-over this little animal's shoulder, in a fray between
-the bear and a biped, is accidentally discharged in a
-direction that, if loaded, must carry leaden death to
-one of the gibing soot merchants above.<a name="FNanchor_81_81" id="FNanchor_81_81"></a><a href="#Footnote_81_81" class="fnanchor">[81]</a></p>
-
-<p>The venerable musician, delighted with his own
-harmony, neither takes a part nor feels an interest in
-the business of the day. Let not his neutrality be
-attributed to a wrong cause; nor be it supposed that,
-in a country where every good citizen must espouse
-some party,<a name="FNanchor_82_82" id="FNanchor_82_82"></a><a href="#Footnote_82_82" class="fnanchor">[82]</a> this ancient personage would remain an
-indifferent spectator were he not totally blind. At
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_114" id="Page_114">[114]</a></span>an opposite corner a naked soldier is taking a few
-refreshing grains of best Virginia, and preparing to
-dress himself after the performance of a pugilistic
-duet. On the other side of the rails a half-starved
-French cook, a half-bred English cook, and a half-roasted
-woman cook, are carrying three covers for
-the lawyers' table. Near them is a cooper inspecting
-a vessel that had been reported leaky, and must
-speedily be filled with home-brewed ale for the gratification
-of the populace. Two fellows are forcing
-their way through the crowd in the background with
-a barrel of the same liquor. Coming out of a street
-behind them, a procession of triumphant electors hail
-the other successful candidate, whose shadow appears
-on the wall of the court-house. In Mr. Attorney's<a name="FNanchor_83_83" id="FNanchor_83_83"></a><a href="#Footnote_83_83" class="fnanchor">[83]</a>
-first floor are a group of the defeated party glorying
-in their security, and highly delighted with the confusion
-below. One of these, distinguished by a riband,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_115" id="Page_115">[115]</a></span>
-is said to be intended for the late Duke of Newcastle,
-who was eminently active on these occasions. A
-poor old lady is unfortunately thrown down by a
-litter of pigs, which, followed by their <em>mamma</em>, rush
-through the crowd with as much impetuosity as if
-the whole herd were possessed. One of this agreeable
-party has leaped, not into the ocean, but the brook,
-and the whole family are on the point of following
-its example.</p>
-
-<p>Hogarth had surely some antipathy to tailors; in
-the background he has introduced one of these
-knights of the needle disciplined by his wife for
-having quitted the shop-board to look at the gentlemen.
-In Le Brun's "Battle of the Granicus," an eagle
-is represented as hovering over the plumed helmet
-of Alexander; this thought is very happily parodied
-in a goose,<a name="FNanchor_84_84" id="FNanchor_84_84"></a><a href="#Footnote_84_84" class="fnanchor">[84]</a> flying immediately over the tye-wig of
-our exalted candidate.</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Nichols, in his <cite>Anecdotes of Hogarth</cite>, very
-shrewdly observes that "the ruined house adjoining
-to the attorney's is a stroke of satire that should
-not be overlooked, because," adds the same writer, "it
-intimates that nothing can thrive in the neighbourhood<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_116" id="Page_116">[116]</a></span>
-of such vermin."<a name="FNanchor_85_85" id="FNanchor_85_85"></a><a href="#Footnote_85_85" class="fnanchor">[85]</a> In this inference I most sincerely
-join, but am afraid that in the present instance
-we cannot establish our data. The house is not in
-ruins from the inhabitant having been unable to keep
-it in repair, neither has it been torn by the teeth of
-time; for it is apparently the wreck of a modern
-edifice, which has been thus destroyed by a riotous
-mob, because it belonged to one of the opposite
-party.</p>
-
-<p>An inscription on the sun-dial, when joined to the
-mortuary representation on the church gate-post, has
-been supposed to imply a pun hardly worthy of
-Hogarth, but which yet I am inclined to suspect
-he intended. "We must,"<a name="FNanchor_86_86" id="FNanchor_86_86"></a><a href="#Footnote_86_86" class="fnanchor">[86]</a> on the sun-dial, say some
-of his illustrators, means&mdash;We must die all (<em>dial</em>).</p>
-
-<p>All the incidents in this very whimsical plate are
-naturally and yet skilfully combined: the whole is
-in the highest degree laughable, and every figure
-stamped with its proper character. The apprehensive
-terror of the unwieldy member, the Herculean
-strength of the exasperated thresher, and the energetic
-attitude of the maimed sailor, deserve peculiar praise.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_117" id="Page_117">[117]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Previous to the publication of this series, Mr.
-Hogarth's satire was generally aimed at the follies
-and vices of individuals. He has here ventured to
-dip his pencil in the ocean of politics, and delineated
-the corrupt and venal conduct of our electors in the
-choice of their representatives. That these four plates
-display a picture in any degree applicable to the
-present times must not be asserted, because it might,
-by the help of <em>innuendo</em>, be construed into a libel on
-the present upright and independent House of Commons:
-but from the floating memorials of some little
-transactions that took place some thirty or forty
-years ago, there is reason to think that the people
-of Great Britain were so far from being influenced by
-a reverence for public virtue, that they began to
-suspect it had no existence. Their faith in violent
-professions of the <i lang="la" xml:lang="la">amor patriæ</i> had been staggered
-by several recent instances of political depravity.
-They had a few years before seen a William Pulteney,
-the champion of patriots, the idol of the
-people, the dread of ministers, desert from the party
-of which he was a leader, quit the cause for which
-he had been the most violent advocate, and accept a
-peerage. This, and some similar circumstances, gave
-an example and an apology for universal venality.</p>
-
-<p>How different was the spirit which actuated the
-Earl of Bath, from that independent dignity, that
-patriotic ardour, that holy enthusiasm, which has<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_118" id="Page_118">[118]</a></span>
-emblazoned the name of Andrew Marvel<a name="FNanchor_87_87" id="FNanchor_87_87"></a><a href="#Footnote_87_87" class="fnanchor">[87]</a> with a
-saint-like glory! Let his name be consecrated by
-the reverence and the gratitude of every Englishman,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_119" id="Page_119">[119]</a></span>
-and may we live to see a band of senators who will
-emulate his virtues! Could we have faith in speeches,
-many which we have heard and read are of much<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_120" id="Page_120">[120]</a></span>
-promise; let us hope that the day of performance
-is at hand.</p>
-
-<p class="p4" />
-<div class="figcenter">
-<img src="images/end_120.jpg" alt="" />
-</div>
-
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_121" id="Page_121">[121]</a></span></p>
-
-<h3>THE MARCH TO FINCHLEY.</h3>
-
-<p class="fs80">"Now I behold the chiefs in the pride of their former deeds; their
-souls are kindled at the battles of old, and the actions of other times.
-Their eyes are like flames of fire, and roll in search of the foes of the
-land. Their mighty hands are on their swords, and lightning pours
-from their sides of steel. They came like streams from the mountains;
-each rushed roaring from his hill. Bright are the chiefs of battle in the
-arms of their fathers."<a name="FNanchor_88_88" id="FNanchor_88_88"></a><a href="#Footnote_88_88" class="fnanchor">[88]</a>&mdash;<span class="smcap">Fingal</span>, Book <span class="fs80">I.</span> p. 7.</p>
-
-<p class="p2" />
-<div class="figcenter">
-<a name="MF" id="MF"></a>
-<img src="images/i_122fp.jpg" width="650" alt="" />
-<div class="caption">THE MARCH TO FINCHLEY.</div>
-</div>
-
-
-<p>That so admirable a representation of the
-manners of England should be dedicated
-to the King of Prussia,<a name="FNanchor_89_89" id="FNanchor_89_89"></a><a href="#Footnote_89_89" class="fnanchor">[89]</a> is one of those odd
-circumstances which must surprise a man who is not
-acquainted with the history of the plate. Before publication
-it was inscribed to his late Majesty, and the
-picture taken to St. James's, in the hope of royal approbation.
-George the Second was an honest man and a
-soldier, but not a judge of either a work of humour or
-a work of art. The corporal or sergeant he considered
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_122" id="Page_122">[122]</a></span>as employed in a way which dignified their nature,
-and gave them a title to the name and rank of gentlemen.
-The painter or engraver, however exquisite
-their skill, however elevated their conceptions, were
-on the King's scale mere mechanics.</p>
-
-<p>When told that Hogarth had painted a picture of
-the Guards on their march to Finchley, and meant
-to dedicate a print engraved from it to the King of
-Great Britain, his Majesty probably expected to see
-an allegorical representation of an army of heroes
-devoting their lives to the service of their country;
-and their sovereign, habited like "the mailed Mars,"
-seated upon a cloud, where he might,</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container"><div class="poetry">
-<p class="verse8">"With a commanding voice,</p>
-<p class="verse">Cry havoc, and let slip the dogs of war."</p>
-</div></div>
-
-<p>If such was his expectation, we may readily conceive
-his disappointment on viewing this delineation. His
-first question was addressed to a nobleman-in-waiting:
-"Pray, who is this Hogarth?" "A painter, my
-liege." "I hate <em>bainting</em>; and <em>boetry</em> too! neither the
-one nor the other ever did any good! Does the fellow
-mean to laugh at my Guards?" "The picture,
-an please your Majesty, must undoubtedly be considered
-as a burlesque." "What! a <em>bainter</em> burlesque
-a soldier? he deserves to be picketed for his insolence!
-Take his trumpery out of my sight."</p>
-
-<p>The print was returned to the artist, who, completely
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_123" id="Page_123">[123]</a></span>mortified at such a reception of what he very
-properly considered as his first work, immediately
-altered the inscription, inserting, instead of the King
-of England, the King of Prussia (as an encourager of
-the arts).</p>
-
-<p>Though the fine arts were never much encouraged
-in Prussia, the painter received a <ins class="corr" title="Transcriber's Note&mdash;Original text: 'handsome ackowledgment'">handsome acknowledgment</ins>
-for his dedication, and afterwards circulated
-proposals for publishing his print by subscription.
-Thus was it announced in the <cite>General Advertiser</cite> of
-April 14, 1750:&mdash;"Mr. Hogarth is publishing by
-subscription a print, representing 'The March to
-Finchley' in the year 1746; engraved on a copperplate
-22 inches by 17: the price, 7s. 6d.</p>
-
-<p>"Subscriptions are taken in at the Golden Head,
-in Leicester Fields, till the 30th of this instant, and
-no longer, to the end that the engraving may not be
-retarded.</p>
-
-<p>"<em>Note.</em>&mdash;Each print will be half a guinea after the
-subscription is over.</p>
-
-<p>"In the subscription-book are the particulars of a
-proposal, whereby each subscriber of three shillings
-over and above the said seven shillings and sixpence
-for the print will, in consideration thereof, be entitled
-to a chance of having the original picture, which shall
-be delivered to the winning subscriber as soon as the
-engraving is finished."</p>
-
-<p><cite>General Advertiser</cite>, May 1, 1750.&mdash;"Yesterday Mr.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_124" id="Page_124">[124]</a></span>
-Hogarth's subscription was closed: eighteen hundred
-and forty-three chances being subscribed for, Mr.
-Hogarth gave the remaining hundred and sixty-seven
-chances to the Foundling Hospital, and the same
-night delivered the picture to the Governors."</p>
-
-<p>By the fortunate number being among those presented
-to a charity which he so much wished to serve,
-the artist was highly gratified. In a private house it
-would have been in a degree secluded from the public,
-and by the lapse of time have been transferred to
-those who could not appreciate its merit, and from
-either negligence or ignorance, might have been
-destroyed by damp walls, or effaced from the canvas
-by picture-cleaners. Here, it was likely to remain a
-permanent and honourable testimony of his talents
-and liberality. Notwithstanding all this, Hogarth
-soon after waited upon the treasurer of the hospital,
-and acquainted him, that if the trustees thought
-proper, they were at liberty to dispose of the picture
-by auction. His motives for giving this permission
-it is not easy to assign. They might have their origin
-in his desire to enrich a foundation which had his
-warmest wishes, or a natural though ill-judged ambition
-to have his greatest work in the possession of
-some one who had a collection of the old masters,
-with whom he in no degree dreaded a competition.
-Whether his mind was actuated by these or other
-causes is not important; certain it is that his opinion<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_125" id="Page_125">[125]</a></span>
-changed&mdash;he requested the trustees would not dispose
-of it, and never afterwards consented to the measure
-he himself had originally proposed. The late Duke
-of Ancaster's father wished to become a purchaser,
-and once offered the trustees three hundred pounds
-for it. I have been told that a much larger sum was
-since proffered by another gentleman.</p>
-
-<p>The scene is laid before the Adam and Eve, in
-Tottenham Court Road, and entitled, "A Representation
-of the March of the Guards towards Scotland
-in the year 1745."</p>
-
-<p>A handsome young grenadier has been denominated
-the principal figure, but may with more propriety
-be called the principal figure of the principal
-group. His countenance exhibits a strong contest
-between affection and duty; for the manner in which
-his Irish helpmate clings to his arm, and at the same
-time with threatening aspect lifts up her right hand
-grasping the <cite>Remembrancer</cite>,<a name="FNanchor_90_90" id="FNanchor_90_90"></a><a href="#Footnote_90_90" class="fnanchor">[90]</a> proves to a moral
-certainty that to her he has made a matrimonial
-vow; while the tender, entreating distress of the poor
-girl at his right hand, seems to intimate that, though
-she possesses his heart, she can make no claim except
-to his gratitude and affection, both of which her
-present situation seems to demand. Her face forms
-a strong contrast to that of the fury who is on the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_126" id="Page_126">[126]</a></span>
-other side; for while one is marked with grief and
-tender regret, the other has all the savage ferocity of
-an unchained tiger: she is an accomplished masculine
-tramp, perfectly qualified to follow a regiment,
-and would be as ready to plunder those that are
-slaughtered as to scold those who escape: being by
-no means of the class described by Dr. Johnson when,
-speaking of superfluous epithets, he says, "they are
-like the valets and washerwomen that follow an army,
-who add to the number without increasing the force."
-The papers of which these two claimants are the
-vendors determine their principles. The mild-tempered,
-soft-featured <em>gentlewoman</em> with a cross upon a
-cloak, is evidently a hawker of the <cite>Jacobites' Journal</cite>,
-<cite>Remembrancer</cite>, and <cite>London Evening Post</cite>, papers
-remarkable for their inflammatory tendency; while a
-portrait of the gallant Duke of Cumberland, and the
-now popular ballad of <em>God save the King</em>, hang upon
-the basket of her rival.</p>
-
-<p>An old woman immediately behind, with a pipe in
-her mouth and a child on her back, appears to have
-grown rather ancient in the service; but notwithstanding
-her load and her poverty, puffs away care, and
-carries a cheerful countenance.</p>
-
-<p>Near the child's head a meagre Frenchman is
-whispering an old fellow, whom Mr. Thornton in his
-description of the plate calls an Independent; but as
-in the original painting part of a plaid appears under<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_127" id="Page_127">[127]</a></span>
-his greatcoat, the artist most probably intended it
-for an old Highlander in disguise. Rouquet, who
-perhaps had his explanation from Hogarth, describes
-it as follows:&mdash;</p>
-
-<p lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">"A droite du principal group paroit une figure de
-François, qu'on a voulu représenter comme un homme
-de quelque importance, afin de lui donner plus de
-ridicule; il parle à un homme dont la nation est indiquée
-par l'étoffe de sa veste, qui est celui dont
-s'habillent les habitans des montagnes d'Ecosse: le
-François semble communiquer à l'Ecossois des lettres
-qu'il vient de recevoir, et qui ont rapport à l'évenement
-qui donne lieu à cette marche. Les Anglois ne
-se réjouissent jamais bien sans qu'il en coute quelque
-chose aux François: leur théatre, leur conversation,
-leurs tableaux, et sur tout ceux de notre peintre,
-portent toujours cette glorieuse marque de l'amour
-de la patrie: les Romans même sont ornés de traits
-amusans sur cet ancien sujet; l'excellent auteur de
-<cite>Tom Jones</cite>, a voulu aussi lâcher les siens. Mais le
-prétendu mépris pour les François dont le peuple de
-ce pais-ci fait profession, s'explique selon moi d'une
-façon fort équivoque. Le mépris suppose l'oubli;
-mais un objet dont on médit perpétuellement occupé:
-la satire constitue une attention qui me feroit soupçonner
-qu'on fait aux François l'honneur de les haïr
-un peu."</p>
-
-<p>A drummer, sick of the remonstrances of his wife<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_128" id="Page_128">[128]</a></span>
-and child, each of whom made a forcible seizure of
-his person, actuated by a spirit similar to that of our
-third Richard, beats a thundering tattoo upon his
-own warlike instrument; and aided by the ear-piercing
-fife<a name="FNanchor_91_91" id="FNanchor_91_91"></a><a href="#Footnote_91_91" class="fnanchor">[91]</a> at his right hand, drowns the noise of the tell-tale
-woman who thus endeavours to check his ardour and
-impede his march. A war-worn soldier contemplating
-a quack-doctor's bill, and a woman peeping out of a
-pent-house above, end the group at the left corner.</p>
-
-<p>Under a sign of the Adam and Eve a crowd are
-gathered round two combatants, who appear to be
-adepts in the noble science of boxing.</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container"><div class="poetry">
-<p class="verseq">"Amid the circle now each champion stands,</p>
-<p class="verse">And poises high in air his iron hands;</p>
-<p class="verse">Hurling defiance; now they fiercely close&mdash;</p>
-<p class="verse">Their crackling jaws re-echo to the blows."</p>
-</div></div>
-
-<p>A man, who from his dress seems to be of a rank
-superior to the crowd, inflamed with a love of glory,
-enters with great spirit into the business now going
-on, and tries to inspire the combatants with a noble
-contempt of bruises and broken bones. This is said
-to be a portrait of Lord Albemarle Bertie, who is
-again exhibited in "The Cockpit." The scene being
-laid in the background, the figures are diminutive;<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_129" id="Page_129">[129]</a></span>
-but every countenance is marked with interest, and
-no one more than a little fellow<a name="FNanchor_92_92" id="FNanchor_92_92"></a><a href="#Footnote_92_92" class="fnanchor">[92]</a> of meagre frame
-but undaunted spirit, who with clenched fists and
-agitated face deals blow for blow with the combatants.
-Somerville, in his <cite>Rural Games</cite>, has well
-described the passions which agitate the audience in
-a similar scene at a country wake:</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container"><div class="poetry">
-<p class="verseq">"Each swain his wish, each trembling nymph conceals</p>
-<p class="verse">Her secret dread; while every panting breast</p>
-<p class="verse">Alternate fears and hopes depress or raise.</p>
-<p class="verse">Thus, long in dubious scale the contest hung," etc.</p>
-</div></div>
-
-<p>With a humour peculiar to himself, the painter has
-exhibited a figure shrinking under the weight of a
-heavy burden, who, preferring the gratification of
-curiosity to rest, is a spectator, and in this uneasy
-state waits the issue of the combat.</p>
-
-<p>Upon the sign-board of the Adam and Eve is inserted,
-"Tottenham Court Nursery," allusive to a
-booth for bruising in the place, as well as a nursery
-for plants, and the group of figures beneath.</p>
-
-<p>A carriage laden with camp equipage, consisting of
-drums, halberds, tent-poles, and hoop petticoats, is
-passing through the turnpike gate. Upon this, two<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_130" id="Page_130">[130]</a></span>
-old female campaigners are puffing their pipes, and
-holding a conversation in fire and smoke. These
-grotesque personages are well contrasted by an elegant
-and singularly delicate figure upon the same
-carriage, suckling her child; which, it has been said,
-proves that the painter is as successful in portraying
-the graceful as the humorous. This very beautiful
-figure is, however, almost a direct copy from Guido's
-"Madonna." To show that a little boy at her feet is of
-an heroic stock, the artist has represented him blowing
-a small trumpet. The sergeant on the ground beneath
-seems exerting the authority with which his post
-vests him in calling his men to order: he has a true
-roast-beef countenance, and is haughty enough for a
-general.</p>
-
-<p>The foreground in the centre is occupied by a
-group of figures, which tell their own story in a
-manner that perhaps no other artist of any age could
-have equalled. While an officer is kissing a milk-maid,
-an arch soldier, taking advantage of her
-neglected pails, fills his hat with milk: this is observed
-by a little chimney-sweeper, who, with a grin
-upon his face, entreats that he may have a share
-in the plunder, and fill his cap. Another soldier
-pointing out the jest to a fellow who is selling pies,
-the pastry-cook, gratified by the mischief, forgets the
-<ins class="corr" title="Transcriber's Note&mdash;Original text: 'luscious cates'">luscious cakes</ins> in the tray on his head, and the
-military Mercury seems likely to convey them all to<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_131" id="Page_131">[131]</a></span>
-his own pocket. The faces of this group are in a
-most singular degree descriptive of their situations,
-and consonant to their mischievous employments.</p>
-
-<p>An old soldier, divested of one spatterdash, near
-losing the other, and felled to the ground by all-potent
-gin, is now calling for more; his uncivil comrade,
-supporting him with one hand, endeavours to
-pour water into his mouth with the other; this the
-veteran toper rejects with disdain, and lifts up a hand
-to his wife, who is bearer of the arms and the bottle,
-and being well acquainted with his taste, fills another
-quartern.</p>
-
-<p>A child with emaciated face extends its little arms,
-and wishes for a taste of that poisonous potion it is
-probably accustomed to swallow: "And here" (says
-Mr. Thornton in the <cite>Student</cite>), "not to dwell wholly
-upon the beauties of this print, I must mention an
-error discovered by a professed connoisseur in painting.
-'Can there,' says this excellent judge, 'be a greater
-absurdity than introducing a couple of chickens so
-near such a crowd; and not only so, but see their
-direction is to objects it is natural for them to shun.&mdash;Is
-this knowledge of nature? Absurd to the last
-degree!' And here, with an air of triumph, ended
-our judicious critic. How great was his surprise,
-when it was pointed out that the said chickens
-were in pursuit of the hen, which appears to have a
-resting-place in a sailor's pocket!"</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_132" id="Page_132">[132]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>An honest tar, throwing up his hat, is crying "God
-save our noble King, God save the King:" immediately
-before him an image of drunken loyalty
-vows de&mdash;de&mdash;destruction on the heads of the rebels.</p>
-
-<p>A humane soldier perceiving a fellow heavy laden
-with a barrel of gin, and stopped by the crowd, bores
-a hole in the head of his cask, and kindly draws off a
-part of his burden. Near him is a figure of what
-may, in the army, be called a fine fellow.<a name="FNanchor_93_93" id="FNanchor_93_93"></a><a href="#Footnote_93_93" class="fnanchor">[93]</a> As I
-suppose the painter designed him without character,
-I shall only observe that he is a very pretty gentleman;
-and happily the contemplation of his own dear
-person guards him from the attempts of the wicked
-woman on his right hand.<a name="FNanchor_94_94" id="FNanchor_94_94"></a><a href="#Footnote_94_94" class="fnanchor">[94]</a></p>
-
-<p>The invention of a new term must be pardoned&mdash;I
-shall include the whole King's Head in the word
-Cattery; the principal figure is a noted fat Covent
-Garden lady,<a name="FNanchor_95_95" id="FNanchor_95_95"></a><a href="#Footnote_95_95" class="fnanchor">[95]</a> who, with pious eyes cast up to heaven,
-prays for the army's success, and the safe return of
-many of her babes of grace. An officer having placed
-a letter on the end of his pike, presents it to one of
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_133" id="Page_133">[133]</a></span>the beauties in the first floor; but the fair <i lang="it" xml:lang="it">enamorata</i>,
-evidently disgusted at the recollection of some part
-of his former conduct, flutters her fan and rejects it
-with disdain. Above her, a charitable girl of an
-inferior order is throwing a piece of coin to a cripple,
-while another kindly administers a glass of comfort
-to her companion as a sure relief against reflection.
-The rest of the windows are crowded with similar characters,
-and upon the house-top is a Cat coterie, a fair
-emblem of the company in the apartments beneath.</p>
-
-<p>The substance of the preceding remarks are, in this
-as in the first edition, taken from the <cite>Student</cite>, vol. ii.
-p. 162, and were made by the late Bonnell Thornton.
-In the <cite>Old Woman's Magazine</cite>, Doctor Hill has given
-an explanation which places it in a point of view somewhat
-different; I have therefore subjoined the greatest
-part of it.</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p class="center"><em>To the Editor.</em></p>
-
-<p>"<span class="smcap">Sir</span>,&mdash;As you desire my sentiments on Mr.
-Hogarth's picture, I shall begin with pointing out
-what is most defective. Its first and greatest fault,
-then, is its being new, and having too great a resemblance
-to the objects it represents: if this appears
-a paradox, you ought to take particular care of confessing
-it. This picture has yet too much of that
-lustre,&mdash;that despicable freshness which we discover
-in nature, and which is never seen in the celebrated
-cabinets of the curious. Time has not yet obscured<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_134" id="Page_134">[134]</a></span>
-it with that venerable smoke, that sacred cloud which
-will one day conceal it from the profane eyes of the
-vulgar, that its beauties may only be seen by those
-who are initiated in the mysteries of art. These are
-its most remarkable faults: and I am next going to
-give you an idea of the subject, which is the march of
-some companies of the foot guards to their rendezvous
-at Finchley Common, when sent against the Scottish
-rebels, who were advancing on that side.</p>
-
-<p>"Mr. Hogarth, who lets no opportunity escape him
-of observing the picturesque scenes which numerous
-assemblies frequently furnish, has not failed to represent
-them on the spot where he has drawn the scene
-of his picture.</p>
-
-<p>"The painter is remarkable for a particular sagacity
-in seizing a thousand little circumstances which escape
-the observation of the greatest part of the spectators,
-and it is a collection of a number of those circumstances
-which has composed, enriched, and diversified
-his work.</p>
-
-<p>"The scene is placed at Tottenham Court, where,
-in a distant view, is seen a file of soldiers marching in
-tolerable order up the hill. Discipline is less observed
-in the principal design; but if you complain of this, I
-must ingeniously inform you, that order and subordination
-belong only to slaves; for what everywhere
-else is called licentiousness, assumes here the venerable
-name of liberty.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_135" id="Page_135">[135]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>"A young grenadier, of a good mien, makes the
-principal figure in the first group; he is accompanied,
-or rather seized and beset, by two women, one of whom
-is a ballad-singer, and the other a news-hawker: they
-are both with child, and claim this hero as the father,
-and except this circumstance they have nothing in
-common; for their figures, their humours, their characters,
-appear extremely different: they are even of
-opposite parties, for the one disposes of works in
-favour of the Government, and the other against it.</p>
-
-<p>"On the left hand of this group is an officer embracing
-a milk-woman; but her greatest misfortune
-is, not her being hugged by a young cavalier, but in
-having one of her milk-pails seized by a wag, who
-pours her milk into a hat, while he is pretending to
-defend her. Near them is a pieman, who is mightily
-rejoiced at this roguery; while a soldier, who is fleering
-in his face, slily steals the pies he carries on his
-head. The humour of this group is greatly heightened
-by a chimney-sweeper's boy, who comes laughing to
-receive some of the milk into his hat, which he carries
-in his hand.</p>
-
-<p>"On the right hand of the principal group is a
-Frenchman, who, to give him a more ridiculous appearance,
-is represented as a man of some importance.
-He is speaking to a very odd person, to whom he
-seems communicating the contents of some letters
-relative to the event which is the cause of this march.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_136" id="Page_136">[136]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>"Behind the Frenchman just mentioned is seen an
-old sutler, who carries her child at her back, and is
-smoking a short pipe. In the front, at a small distance,
-is a drummer, who by the noise of his drum
-seems to endeavour to stun all thoughts of the fate of
-his family, who seek in vain to soften him by taking
-a tender leave.</p>
-
-<p>"One of the young pipers whom the Duke of
-Cumberland has introduced into several regiments,
-joins his noise to that of the drum, and by the agreeable
-appearance of his little person, is a contrast to
-the rudeness of the objects who are near him, etc. etc."</p></div>
-
-<p>To the dramatic effect of the picture, the late Mr.
-Arthur Murphy, whose acknowledged judgment give
-weight to his praise, bears the following honourable
-testimony in the <cite>Gray's Inn Journal</cite>, vol. i. No. 20:&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>"The era may arrive, when, through the instability
-of the English language, the style of <cite>Joseph Andrews</cite>
-and <cite>Tom Jones</cite> shall be obliterated, when the characters
-shall be unintelligible, and the humour lose its
-relish; but the many personages which the manner-painting
-hand of Hogarth has called forth into mimic
-life will not fade so soon from the canvas, and that
-admirable picturesque comedy, 'The March to
-Finchley,' will perhaps divert posterity as long as the
-Foundling Hospital shall do honour to the British
-nation."</p></div>
-
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_137" id="Page_137">[137]</a></span></p>
-
-<h3>THE INVASION; OR, FRANCE AND ENGLAND.</h3>
-
-<div>
-<img class="drop-cap" src="images/dc_137.jpg" alt="" />
-</div>
-
-<p class="drop-cap">In the two following designs Mr. Hogarth
-has displayed that partiality for his own
-country, and contempt for France, which
-formed a strong trait in his character. He neither
-forgot nor forgave the insults he suffered at Calais,
-though he did not recollect that this treatment originated
-in his own ill-humour, which threw a sombre
-shade over every object that presented itself. Having
-early imbibed the vulgar prejudice that one Englishman
-was a match for four Frenchmen,<a name="FNanchor_96_96" id="FNanchor_96_96"></a><a href="#Footnote_96_96" class="fnanchor">[96]</a> he thought it
-would be doing his country a service to prove the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_138" id="Page_138">[138]</a></span>
-position. How far it is either useful or political to
-depreciate the power or degrade the character of that
-people with whom we are to contend, is a question
-which does not come within the plan of this work.
-In some cases it may create confidence, but in others
-leads to the indulgence of that negligent security by
-which armies have been slaughtered, provinces depopulated,
-and kingdoms changed their rulers.</p>
-
-<p>These two glaring contrasts were designed at a
-time when there was a rumour of an invasion from
-France. The sober politician treated this idle report
-with contempt; but by the credulous it was believed,
-and the timid trembled when they heard it. To
-dispel this phantom of the day was one motive for
-Hogarth's publication of these prints. They are not
-addressed to the philosopher or the legislator, but
-to the soldier and the sailor. They are not designed
-for the contemplation of the informed and travelled
-man, who considers himself as a citizen of the world;
-but for the true-born and true-bred Briton, that
-believes this to be the only country where man can
-enjoy happiness, and thinks an Englishman is the
-boast of the universe, the glory of creation, and the
-paragon of nature!</p>
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_139" id="Page_139">[139]</a></span></p>
-
-<p class="p2" />
-<h4>PLATE I.</h4>
-
-<p class="pfs70">FRANCE.</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container"><div class="poetry">
-<div class="stanza">
-<p class="verseq">"With lantern jaws, and croaking gut,</p>
-<p class="verse">See how the half-starv'd Frenchmen strut,</p>
-<p class="verse4">And call us English dogs!</p>
-<p class="verse">But soon we'll teach these bragging foes,</p>
-<p class="verse">That beef and beer give heavier blows</p>
-<p class="verse4">Than soup and roasted frogs.</p>
-</div>
-<div class="stanza">
-<p class="verse">"The priests, inflam'd with righteous hopes,</p>
-<p class="verse">Prepare their axes, wheels, and ropes,</p>
-<p class="verse4">To bend the stiff-neck'd sinner;</p>
-<p class="verse">But should they sink in coming over,</p>
-<p class="verse">Old Nick may fish 'twixt France and Dover,</p>
-<p class="verse4">And catch a glorious dinner."</p>
-</div></div></div>
-
-<p class="p2" />
-<div class="figcenter">
-<a name="FE_I" id="FE_I"></a>
-<img src="images/i_140fp.jpg" width="650" alt="" />
-<div class="caption">FRANCE PLATE I.</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class="noindent">The scenes of all Mr. Hogarth's prints, except "The
-Gate of Calais" and that now under consideration, are
-laid in England. In this, having quitted his own
-country, he seems to think himself out of the reach of
-the critics, and in delineating a Frenchman, at liberty
-to depart from nature, and sport in the fairy regions
-of caricature. Were these Gallic soldiers naked, each
-of them would appear like a forked radish, with a
-head fantastically carved upon it with a knife. So
-forlorn! that to any thick sight he would be invisible!
-To see this miserable woe-begone refuse
-of the army, who look like a group detached from
-the main body and put on the sick-list, embarking to
-conquer a neighbouring kingdom, is ridiculous enough,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_140" id="Page_140">[140]</a></span>
-and at the time of publication must have had great
-effect. The artist seemed sensible that it was necessary
-to account for the unsubstantial appearance of
-these shadows of men, and has hinted at their want
-of solid food, in the bare bones of beef hung up in
-the window, the inscription on the alehouse sign,
-"<span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Soup maigre à la sabot Royal</span>," and the spider-like
-officer roasting four frogs which he has impaled upon
-his sword. Such light and airy diet is whimsically
-opposed by the motto on the standard, which two of
-the most valorous of this ghastly troop are hailing
-with grim delight and loud exultation. It is indeed
-an attractive motto, and well calculated to inspire
-this famishing company with courage: "<span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Vengeance,
-avec le bon bier, et bon beuf d'Angleterre.</span>" However
-meagre the military, the church militant is in no
-danger of starving. The portly friar is neither emaciated
-by fasting, nor weakened by penance. Anticipating
-the glory of extirpating heresy, he is feeling
-the sharp edge of an axe to be employed in the
-decollation of the enemies to the true faith, which if
-any one doubt, he shall die the death. A sledge is
-laden with whips, wheels, ropes, chains, gibbets, and
-other inquisitorial engines of torture, which are admirably
-calculated for the propagation of a religion
-that was established in meekness and mercy, and
-inculcates universal charity and forbearance. On the
-same sledge is an image of St. Anthony, very properly
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_141" id="Page_141">[141]</a></span>accompanied by his pig, and the plan of a monastery
-to be built at Blackfriars.</p>
-
-<p>In the background are a troop of soldiers so averse
-to this English expedition, that their sergeant is
-obliged to goad them forward with his halberd. To
-intimate that agriculture suffers by the invasion having
-engaged the masculine inhabitants, two women
-ploughing a sterile promontory in the distance complete
-this catalogue of wretchedness, misery, and
-famine.</p>
-
-
-<p class="p2" />
-<h4>PLATE II</h4>
-
-<p class="pfs70">ENGLAND.</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container"><div class="poetry">
-<div class="stanza">
-<p class="verseq">"See John the Soldier, Jack the Tar,</p>
-<p class="verse">With sword and pistol arm'd for war,</p>
-<p class="verse4">Should <em>Mounseer</em> dare come here;</p>
-<p class="verse">The hungry slaves have smelt our food,</p>
-<p class="verse">They long to taste our flesh and blood,</p>
-<p class="verse4">Old England's beef and beer!</p>
-</div>
-<div class="stanza">
-<p class="verseq">"Britons, to arms! and let 'em come;</p>
-<p class="verse">Be you but Britons still, strike home,</p>
-<p class="verse4">And lion-like attack 'em,</p>
-<p class="verse">No power can stand the deadly stroke</p>
-<p class="verse">That's given from hands and hearts of oak,</p>
-<p class="verse4">With liberty to back 'em."</p>
-</div></div></div>
-
-<p class="p2" />
-<div class="figcenter">
-<a name="FE_II" id="FE_II"></a>
-<img src="images/i_142fp.jpg" width="650" alt="" />
-<div class="caption">ENGLAND PLATE II.</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class="noindent">From the unpropitious regions of France, our scene
-changes to the fertile fields of England.</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container"><div class="poetry">
-<p class="verseq">"England! bound in with the triumphant sea,</p>
-<p class="verse">Whose rocky shores beat back the envious siege</p>
-<p class="verse">Of wat'ry Neptune."</p>
-</div></div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_142" id="Page_142">[142]</a></span></p>
-
-<p class="noindent">Instead of the forlorn and famished party who were
-represented in the last plate, we here see a company
-of well-fed and high-spirited Britons, marked with all
-the hardihood of ancient times, and eager to defend
-their country.</p>
-
-<p>In the first group, a young peasant who aspires to
-a niche in the Temple of Fame, preferring the service
-of Mars to that of Ceres, and the dignified appellation
-of soldier to the plebeian name of farmer, offers to
-enlist. Standing with his back against the halberd
-to ascertain his height, and finding he is rather under
-the mark,<a name="FNanchor_97_97" id="FNanchor_97_97"></a><a href="#Footnote_97_97" class="fnanchor">[97]</a> he endeavours to reach it by rising on
-tiptoe. This artifice, to which he is impelled by
-<em>towering ambition</em>, the sergeant seems disposed to
-connive at&mdash;and the sergeant is a hero, and a great
-man in his way; "your hero always must be tall,
-you know."</p>
-
-<p>To evince that the polite arts were then in a
-flourishing state, and cultivated by more than the
-immediate professors, a gentleman artist, who to
-common eyes must pass for a grenadier, is making a
-caricature of <i lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">le Grand Monarque</i>. The sovereign of
-France was in that day as general a subject for
-copper satire as Mr. Fox is in this. I have seen
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_143" id="Page_143">[143]</a></span>engravings, where his Gallic Majesty made one of the
-party, that were not a degree better than the grenadier's
-drawing, where, to render the meaning obvious,
-and supply the want of character, or story, every
-figure had a label hanging to its mouth. That given
-to this king of shreds and patches is worthy the
-speaker, and worthy observation: "You take a my
-fine ships: you be de pirate; you be de teef: me
-send my grand armies, and hang you all."</p>
-
-<p>The action is suited to the word, for with his left
-hand this most Christian potentate grasps his sword,
-and in his right poises a gibbet. The figure and
-motto united, produce a roar of approbation from the
-soldier and sailor, who are criticising the work. It
-is so natural, that the Helen and Briseis of the camp
-contemplate the performance with apparent delight;
-and while one of them with her apron measures the
-breadth of this Herculean painter's shoulders, the
-other, to show that the performance <em>has some point</em>,
-places her forefinger against the prongs of a fork.
-The little fifer, playing that animated and inspiring
-tune "God save the King," is an old acquaintance:
-we recollect him in "The March to Finchley." In
-the background is a sergeant teaching a company
-of young recruits their manual exercise.</p>
-
-<p>This military meeting is held at the sign of the
-gallant Duke of Cumberland, who is mounted upon
-a prancing charger,</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_144" id="Page_144">[144]</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container"><div class="poetry">
-<p class="verseq">"As if an angel dropt down from the clouds,</p>
-<p class="verse">To turn and wield a fiery Pegasus,</p>
-<p class="verse">And witch the world with noble horsemanship."<a name="FNanchor_98_98" id="FNanchor_98_98"></a><a href="#Footnote_98_98" class="fnanchor">[98]</a></p>
-</div></div>
-
-<p>Underneath is inscribed, "Roast and boiled every
-day;" which, with the beef and beverage upon the
-table, forms a fine contrast to the <i lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">soup maigre</i>, bare
-bones, and roasted frogs, in the last print. The
-bottle painted on the wall, foaming with liquor
-which, impatient of imprisonment, has burst its cerements,
-must be an irresistible invitation to a thirsty
-traveller. The soldier's sword laid upon the round
-of beef, and the sailor's pistol on the vessel containing
-the ale, intimate that these great bulwarks of our
-island are as tenacious of their beef and beer as of
-their religion and liberty.</p>
-
-<p>These two plates were published in 1756; but in
-the <cite>London Chronicle</cite> for October 20, 1759, is the
-following advertisement:&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>"This day are re-published, price 1s. each, Two
-prints designed and etched by William Hogarth: one
-representing the preparations on the French coast
-for an intended invasion; the other, a view of the
-preparations making in England to oppose the wicked
-designs of our enemies; proper to be stuck up in<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_145" id="Page_145">[145]</a></span>
-public places, both in town and country, at this
-juncture."<a name="FNanchor_99_99" id="FNanchor_99_99"></a><a href="#Footnote_99_99" class="fnanchor">[99]</a></p></div>
-
-<p>The verses which are inserted under each print,
-and subjoined to this account, are, it must be acknowledged,
-coarse enough. They were, however, written
-by David Garrick, who, had he thought the subject
-worthy of his muse, could, I believe, have produced
-more elegant stanzas.</p>
-
-<p class="p4" />
-<div class="figcenter">
-<img src="images/end_145.jpg" alt="" />
-</div>
-
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_146" id="Page_146">[146]</a></span></p>
-
-<h3>THE COCKPIT.</h3>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>"It is worth your while to come to England, were it only to see an
-election and a cock-match. There is a celestial spirit of anarchy and
-confusion in these two scenes that words cannot paint, and of which
-no countryman of yours can form even an idea."&mdash;<cite>Sherlock's Letters to a
-friend at Paris.</cite></p></div>
-
-<p class="p2" />
-<div class="figcenter">
-<a name="CP" id="CP"></a>
-<img src="images/i_146fp.jpg" width="650" alt="" />
-<div class="caption">THE COCKPIT.</div>
-</div>
-
-<div>
-<img class="drop-cap" src="images/dc_146.jpg" alt="" />
-</div>
-
-<p class="drop-capy">Mr. Sherlock is perfectly right in his
-assertion, that neither of these scenes can
-be described by words; but where the writer
-must have failed, the artist has succeeded, and the
-Parisian who has never visited England may, from
-Mr. Hogarth's Prints, form a tolerably correct idea
-of the anarchy of an election, and the confusion of
-a cockpit. To the right learned and laborious successors
-of Master Thomas Hearne, it would be matter
-of curious speculation, and worthy of deep research,
-to inquire which of these "popular sportes was fyrste
-practysed in fair Englonde." To their grave and useful
-investigations I leave the decision of this knotty
-point. The earliest information of this <em>gentile</em> and
-<em>royal</em> game which my reading supplies, I find in a
-treatise, published in 1674, and entitled <cite>The Complete
-Gamester</cite>, containing instructions how to play at
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_147" id="Page_147">[147]</a></span>Billiards, Trucks, Bowls, Chess, etc. "To which is
-added, The Artes and Mysteries of Riding, Racing,
-Archery, and Cock Fighting. Printed by A. M. for
-R. Cutler, and to be sold by Henry Brome, at the
-Gun, at the west end of St. Paul's." To this curious
-little <i lang="la" xml:lang="la">vade mecum</i> there is a frontispiece divided into
-five compartments. One of them represents a cockpit,
-in the centre of which two of the feathered tribe,
-not unlike ducks, are fighting. The pit is surrounded
-by a company of crop-eared figures in round hats,
-with faces as demure and sanctified as are to be seen
-at a Quakers' meeting. Before many of these most
-sedate personages are heaps of gold, and (alluding to
-the print) the following sublime verses:&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container"><div class="poetry">
-<p class="verseq">"After these three, the cockpit claims a name;</p>
-<p class="verse">A sport <em>gentile</em>, and call'd a royal game.</p>
-<p class="verse">Now see the gallants crowd about the pit,</p>
-<p class="verse">And most are stock'd with money more than wit;</p>
-<p class="verse">Else sure they would not, with so great a stir,</p>
-<p class="verse">Lay ten to one on a cock's faithless spur."</p>
-</div></div>
-
-<p>To the respect which our ancestors had for this
-<em>kingly</em> amusement, the author beareth ample testimony
-in his 38th chapter, some extracts from which
-I venture to insert, with the hope that they will be
-both pleasant and profitable to the lovers of this
-very refined and humane divertisement:&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>"It is a sport or pastime so full of delight and
-pleasure, that I know not any game in that respect<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_148" id="Page_148">[148]</a></span>
-is to be preferred before it; and since the fighting
-cock hath gained so great an estimation among the
-gentry, in respect to this noble recreation, I shall
-here propose it before all the other games of which I
-have afore succinctly discoursed. That, therefore, I
-may methodically give instructions to such as are
-unlearned, and add more knowledge to such who
-have already gained a competent proficiency in this
-pleasing art, I shall, as briefly as I can, give you
-information how you shall choose, breed, and diet
-the fighting cock, with what choice secrets are thereunto
-belonging, in order thus:&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>"In the election<a name="FNanchor_100_100" id="FNanchor_100_100"></a><a href="#Footnote_100_100" class="fnanchor">[100]</a> of a fighting cock, there are four
-things principally to be considered; and they are:
-shape, colour, courage, and a sharp heel.</p>
-
-<p>"Observe the crowing of your chickens; if you find
-them crow too soon, that is, before six months old,
-or unseasonably, and that their crowing is clear and
-loud, fit them as soon as you can for the pot or spit,
-for they are infallible signs of cowardice and falsehood:
-on the contrary, the true and perfect cock is
-long before he obtaineth his voice, and when he hath
-got it, observeth his hours with the best judgment."</p></div>
-
-<p>After much more which I have not room to insert, the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_149" id="Page_149">[149]</a></span>
-author addeth, "To conclude, make your choice of
-such a one that is of shape strong, of colour good, of
-valour true, and of heel sharp and ready."</p>
-
-<p>Leaving the book to the study of those whom it
-may concern, let us now attend to the plate.</p>
-
-<p>The scene is probably laid at Newmarket;<a name="FNanchor_101_101" id="FNanchor_101_101"></a><a href="#Footnote_101_101" class="fnanchor">[101]</a> and in
-this motley group of peers, pickpockets, butchers,
-jockeys, ratcatchers, gentlemen,&mdash;gamblers of every
-denomination,&mdash;Lord Albemarle Bertie,<a name="FNanchor_102_102" id="FNanchor_102_102"></a><a href="#Footnote_102_102" class="fnanchor">[102]</a> being the
-principal figure, is entitled to precedence. In a former
-print<a name="FNanchor_103_103" id="FNanchor_103_103"></a><a href="#Footnote_103_103" class="fnanchor">[103]</a> we saw him an attendant at a boxing
-match; and here he is president of a most respectable
-society assembled at a cockpit. What rendered his
-Lordship's passion for amusements of this nature very
-singular, was his being totally blind. In this place
-he is beset by seven steady friends, five of whom at
-the same instant offer to bet with him on the event of
-the battle. One of them, a lineal descendant of Filch,
-taking advantage of his blindness and negligence,
-endeavours to convey a bank note, deposited in our
-dignified gambler's hat, to his own pocket. Of this
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_150" id="Page_150">[150]</a></span>ungentleman-like attempt his Lordship is apprised
-by a ragged postboy and an honest butcher: but so
-much engaged in the pronunciation of those important
-words, "Done! done! done! done!" and the
-arrangement of his bets, that he cannot attend to
-their hints; and it seems more than probable that
-the stock will be <em>transferred</em> and the note <em>negotiated</em>
-in a few seconds.</p>
-
-<p>A very curious group surround the old nobleman,
-who is adorned with a riband, a star, and a pair of
-spectacles. The whole weight of an overgrown carpenter
-being laid upon his shoulder, forces our illustrious
-personage upon a man beneath; who being
-thus driven downward, falls upon a fourth; and the
-fourth, by the accumulated pressure of this ponderous
-trio&mdash;composed of the <em>upper and lower house</em>&mdash;loses
-his balance, and tumbling against the edge of the
-partition, his head is broke, and his wig, shook from
-the seat of reason, falls into the cockpit.</p>
-
-<p>A man adjoining enters into the spirit of the battle&mdash;his
-whole soul is engaged. From his distorted
-countenance and clasped hands, we see that he feels
-every stroke given to his favourite bird in his heart's
-core, ay, in his heart of hearts! A person at the old
-Peer's left hand is likely to be a loser. Ill-humour,
-vexation, and disappointment are painted in his countenance.
-The chimney-sweeper above is the very
-quintessence of affectation. He has all the airs and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_151" id="Page_151">[151]</a></span>
-graces of a boarding-school miss. There are those
-who remember the man, and declare that his character
-is not heightened in the portrait. The sanctified
-Quaker adjoining, and the fellow beneath, who, by the
-way, is a very similar figure to Captain Stab in "The
-Rake's Progress," are finely contrasted.</p>
-
-<p>A French marquis, on the other side, astonished
-at this being called amusement, is exclaiming <i lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Sauvages!
-sauvages! sauvages!</i> Engrossed by the scene,
-and opening his snuff-box rather carelessly, its contents
-fall into the eyes of a man below, who, sneezing
-and swearing alternately, imprecates bitter curses on
-this devil's dust, that extorts from his inflamed eyes
-"a sea of melting pearls, which some call tears."</p>
-
-<p>Adjoining is an old cripple with a trumpet at his
-ear, and in this trumpet a person in a bag-wig roars in
-a manner that cannot much gratify the auricular nerves
-of his companions; but as for the object to whom
-the voice is directed, he seems totally insensible to
-sounds, and if judgment can be formed from appearances,
-might very composedly stand close to the clock
-of St. Paul's Cathedral when it was striking twelve.</p>
-
-<p>The figure with a cock peeping out of a bag is said
-to be intended for Jackson, a jockey. The gravity of
-this experienced veteran, and the cool sedateness of a
-man registering the wagers, are well opposed by the
-grinning woman behind, and the heated impetuosity
-of a fellow, stripped to his shirt, throwing his coin<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_152" id="Page_152">[152]</a></span>
-upon the cockpit, and offering to back Ginger against
-Pye for a guinea.</p>
-
-<p>On the lower side, where there is only one tier of
-figures, a sort of an apothecary, and a jockey, are
-stretching out their arms and striking together the
-handles of their whips in token of a bet. An hiccuping
-votary of Bacchus, displaying a half-emptied purse,
-is not likely to possess it long; for an adroit professor
-of legerdemain has taken aim with an hooked stick,
-and by one slight jerk will convey it to his own
-pocket. The profession of a gentlemen in a round
-wig is determined by a gibbet chalked upon his coat.
-An enraged barber, who lifts up his stick in the corner,
-has probably been refused payment of a wager by
-the man at whom he is striking.</p>
-
-<p>A cloud-capt philosopher at the top of the print,
-coolly smoking his pipe, unmoved by this crash of
-matter and wreck of property, must not be overlooked:
-neither should his dog be neglected; for the
-dog, gravely resting his fore-paws upon the partition,<a name="FNanchor_104_104" id="FNanchor_104_104"></a><a href="#Footnote_104_104" class="fnanchor">[104]</a><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_153" id="Page_153">[153]</a></span>
-and contemplating the company, seems more interested
-in the event of the battle than his master.</p>
-
-<p>Like the tremendous Gog and terrific Magog of
-Guildhall, stand the two cock-feeders; a foot of each
-of these consequential purveyors is seen at the two
-extremities of the pit.</p>
-
-<p>As to the birds whose attractive powers have drawn
-this admiring throng together, they deserved earlier
-notice&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container"><div class="poetry">
-<p class="verseq">"Each hero burns to conquer or to die,</p>
-<p class="verse">What mighty hearts in little bosoms lie!"</p>
-</div></div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_154" id="Page_154">[154]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Having disposed of the substances, let us now
-attend to the shadow on the cockpit, and this it seems
-is the reflection of a man drawn up to the ceiling in
-a basket, and there suspended<a name="FNanchor_105_105" id="FNanchor_105_105"></a><a href="#Footnote_105_105" class="fnanchor">[105]</a> as a punishment for
-having betted more money than he can pay. Though
-suspended, he is not reclaimed; though exposed, not
-abashed; for in this degrading situation he offers to
-stake his watch against money in another wager on
-his favourite champion.</p>
-
-<p>The decorations of this curious theatre are, a
-portrait of Nan Rawlins,<a name="FNanchor_106_106" id="FNanchor_106_106"></a><a href="#Footnote_106_106" class="fnanchor">[106]</a> and the King's arms.</p>
-
-<p>In the margin at the bottom of the print is an oval,
-with a fighting cock, inscribed "Royal sport," and
-underneath it is written, "Pit ticket."</p>
-
-<p>Of the characteristic distinctions in this heterogeneous
-assembly, it is not easy to speak with
-sufficient praise. The chimney-sweeper's absurd
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_155" id="Page_155">[155]</a></span>affectation sets the similar airs of the Frenchman in a
-most ridiculous point of view. The old fellow with a
-trumpet at his ear has a degree of deafness that I
-never before saw delineated; he might have lived in
-the same apartment with Xantippe, or slept comfortably
-in Alexander the coppersmith's first floor. As
-to the nobleman in the centre, in the language of
-the turf, he is a mere pigeon; and the Peer, with a
-star and garter, in the language of Cambridge, we
-must class as&mdash;a mere quiz. The man sneezing, you
-absolutely hear; and the fellow stealing a bank note
-has all the outward and visible marks of a perfect and
-accomplished pickpocket; Mercury himself could not
-do that business in a more masterly style.</p>
-
-<p>I hope it will not be thought irrelevant to my
-subject if I here name a man whose periods have
-polished the English language, and given to poesy a
-harmony before unknown.</p>
-
-<p>To Alexander Pope, Hogarth had an early dislike.
-Pope was the friend of Lord Burlington,&mdash;Lord
-Burlington was the patron of Kent, and Kent was the
-rival of Sir James Thornhill, who was the father-in-law
-of William Hogarth. In two of his miscellaneous
-prints, our mellifluous poet is exhibited in very
-degrading situations. In one<a name="FNanchor_107_107" id="FNanchor_107_107"></a><a href="#Footnote_107_107" class="fnanchor">[107]</a> he is represented as
-whitewashing the gate of Burlington House, and in<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_156" id="Page_156">[156]</a></span>
-the violence of his operation bespattering the carriage
-of his Grace of Chandos, etc.; and in the other, picking
-John Gay's<a name="FNanchor_108_108" id="FNanchor_108_108"></a><a href="#Footnote_108_108" class="fnanchor">[108]</a> pocket.</p>
-
-<p>Had the artist been acquainted with a circumstance
-mentioned by Mr. Tyers in his <cite>Rhapsody</cite>, our British
-Horace would very probably have had a place in this
-group. Tyers tells us that "Pope, while living with
-his father at Chiswick, before he went to Binfield, took<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_157" id="Page_157">[157]</a></span>
-great delight in cock-fighting, and laid out all his
-schoolboy money, and little perhaps it was, in buying
-fighting cocks. From this passion, but surely not the
-play of a child, his mother had the dexterity to wean
-him."</p>
-
-<p>Admitting the fact, for which I have no other
-authority than the pamphlet above quoted, it does not
-tell in favour of that delicate and tender humanity
-which this elegant poet so much affected. On his
-conduct to Lady Mary Wortley Montagu, Lord
-Bolingbroke, Mr. Addison, and Mr. Broome, I will
-make no comment; but his bitter satire on the Duke
-of Chandos,<a name="FNanchor_109_109" id="FNanchor_109_109"></a><a href="#Footnote_109_109" class="fnanchor">[109]</a> while it exalts his poetical powers, dishonours
-his moral character. The animation, energy,
-and elegance of the stanzas would atone for almost
-anything&mdash;but <em>ingratitude</em>!</p>
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_158" id="Page_158">[158]</a></span></p>
-<p>Lord Orrery observes: "If we may judge of Mr.
-Pope from his works, his chief aim was to be esteemed
-a man of virtue." When actions can be clearly ascertained,
-it is not necessary to seek the mind's construction
-in the writings; and I regret being compelled to
-believe that some of Mr. Pope's actions, at the same
-time that they prove him to be querulous and petulant,
-lead us to suspect that he was also envious, malignant,
-and cruel. How far this will tend to confirm the
-assertion, that when a boy he was an amateur<a name="FNanchor_110_110" id="FNanchor_110_110"></a><a href="#Footnote_110_110" class="fnanchor">[110]</a> of this
-royal sport,<a name="FNanchor_111_111" id="FNanchor_111_111"></a><a href="#Footnote_111_111" class="fnanchor">[111]</a> I do not pretend to decide: but were a
-child in whom I had any interest cursed with such a
-propensity, my first object would be to correct it; if
-that were impracticable, and he retained a fondness
-for the cockpit, and the still more detestable amusement
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_159" id="Page_159">[159]</a></span>of Shrove Tuesday,<a name="FNanchor_112_112" id="FNanchor_112_112"></a><a href="#Footnote_112_112" class="fnanchor">[112]</a> I should hardly dare to
-flatter myself that he could become a merciful man.
-The subject has carried me further than I intended.
-I will, however, take the freedom of proposing one
-query to the consideration of the clergy, should any
-of that sacred order do me the honour of perusing
-this volume. Might it not have a tendency to check
-that barbarous spirit, which has more frequently its
-source in an early acquired habit arising from the
-prevalence of example than in natural depravity, if
-every divine in Great Britain were to preach at least
-one sermon every twelve months on our universal
-insensibility to the sufferings of the brute creation?<a name="FNanchor_113_113" id="FNanchor_113_113"></a><a href="#Footnote_113_113" class="fnanchor">[113]</a></p>
-
-<p class="p4" />
-<div class="figcenter">
-<img src="images/end_159.jpg" alt="" />
-</div>
-
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_160" id="Page_160">[160]</a></span></p>
-
-<h3>CREDULITY, SUPERSTITION, AND FANATICISM.</h3>
-
-<p class="pfs70">A MEDLEY.</p>
-
-<p class="fs80">"Believe not every spirit, but try the spirits whether they are of
-God; because many false prophets are gone out into the world."&mdash;1
-<span class="smcap">John IV.</span> 1.</p>
-
-<p class="p2" />
-<div class="figcenter">
-<a name="CS" id="CS"></a>
-<img src="images/i_160fp.jpg" width="600" alt="" />
-<div class="caption">CREDULITY SUPERSTITION AND FANATICISM.</div>
-</div>
-
-<div>
-<img class="drop-cap" src="images/dc_160.jpg" alt="" />
-</div>
-
-<p class="drop-capy">Whoever reads history with a view of
-tracing the progress of the human mind,&mdash;which,
-by the way, is the great object that
-renders history useful,&mdash;whoever reads history with
-that regard, must be astonished and shocked at the
-slow progress of philosophy, and the universal prevalence
-of credulity, superstition, and fanaticism. If
-antiquity would give a claim to reverence, this destructive
-band have a date prior to Christianity; their
-united power shed baneful influence on the earliest
-ages.</p>
-
-<p>In the pagan temples there was a kind of incantation
-for conjuring down deities, to whom were assigned
-niches according to their different degrees of rank.
-The histories of Greece and Rome (for the sake of
-human nature, I wish that the parallel did not reach
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_161" id="Page_161">[161]</a></span>modern times) display an innumerable host of all ages,
-sexes, descriptions, and characters, enlisted under the
-banner of the priesthood, together with a select <i lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">corps
-de reserve</i> of augurs and soothsayers, who, by inspecting
-the entrails of beasts, foretold future events,
-and from the flight of birds the defeat of armies.
-Succeeding ages beheld their heathen temples solemnly
-consecrated; and being thus metamorphosed
-into Christian churches, the sculptures representing
-Jupiter, Minerva, Venus, and Diana, by virtue of a
-new baptism, became saints.<a name="FNanchor_114_114" id="FNanchor_114_114"></a><a href="#Footnote_114_114" class="fnanchor">[114]</a></p>
-
-<p>Here also were a legion of arrogant priests, who
-insolently dictated the terms of salvation, fixed a
-standard for universal belief, and introduced their
-own inventions as divine precepts; who forced
-monarchs to pay tribute by ecclesiastical privilege,
-assumed the dominion of empires by divine right,
-and claimed three-fourths of the known world as
-heirs-at-law to St. Peter. To secure their acquisitions,
-they entrenched themselves behind ramparts
-raised on the credulity and folly of mankind. He
-who attempted to scale these hallowed mounds was<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_162" id="Page_162">[162]</a></span>
-deemed guilty of sacrilege; he who questioned the
-catholic infallibility was an atheist; and whosoever
-doubted the divine mission of a priest&mdash;an infidel.<a name="FNanchor_115_115" id="FNanchor_115_115"></a><a href="#Footnote_115_115" class="fnanchor">[115]</a></p>
-
-<p>Finding the multitude were so well inclined to believe
-that whatever they could not comprehend was
-supernatural, they construed each phenomenon of
-nature into a portentous menace from Heaven. An
-eclipse became the omen of a revolution; an inundation
-the prognostic of a defeat; and an hurricane
-foretold the fall of every power that made any opposition
-to papal authority. By arts like these, the
-people were brought into a mental vassalage; and the
-powerful Baron having previously enslaved their persons,
-they readily gave the care of their souls to the
-confessor. To him they applied as the proper interpreter
-of every difficult case; and fraught with a full
-portion of credulity, each individual considered every
-cloud that passed over the sun, and every raven that
-expanded its ebon wing, as bearing some particular
-direction to himself. Hence arose the doctrine of
-demonology; and apparitions, witches, dreams, and
-divinations, formed a creed of superstition. On this
-was built that notable system, properly enough called
-"The Philosophy of the Distaff." This mythology
-of weak minds has been carried through every<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_163" id="Page_163">[163]</a></span>
-age and country by oral tradition and unfounded
-record.</p>
-
-<p>Our earliest histories abound in augury and prediction;
-the most fabulous tales had credence, not
-only with the unlearned and ignorant, but with the
-educated and sagacious. The grave Duke de Sully
-seriously narrates those which had relation to Henry
-the Fourth.</p>
-
-<p>It is recorded by Victorius Sirri, that Louis the
-Thirteenth was from his infancy surnamed Just,&mdash;"because
-he was born under the sign of the Balance!"</p>
-
-<p>Even sorcery was made a leading branch of religion;
-and one of a priest's duties was to exorcise ghosts
-by talking Latin, which was considered as a never-failing
-antidote for a troublesome spirit, and invariably
-concluded by the ghost being <em>laid in the Red Sea</em>.</p>
-
-<p>Some of these glaring errors have been obliterated,
-but absurdities of equal magnitude have supplied
-their place; and modern credulities are nearly as
-destructive to the interests of society as ancient superstitions.</p>
-
-<p>Though this nation, as well as others, was at an
-early period enveloped by ignorance, superstition,
-and their consequent accompaniments, we had some
-right to expect the clouds would have been dispelled
-by the Reformation; but credulity kept its ground,
-and at a still later period&mdash;when we had a most
-learned and sedate monarch, and a most sententious<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_164" id="Page_164">[164]</a></span>
-and grave Parliament&mdash;an Act was passed for the
-punishment of witchcraft! By this sagacious union
-of royal and national wisdom, if a woman lived to a
-greater age than her neighbour, she was tried, proved
-guilty of commercing with a familiar in the shape of
-a tabby cat, and eased of all her sufferings by the
-ordeal of fire or water.</p>
-
-<p>It is not many years since a fanatic in one of our
-colonies took a fancy to accuse a neighbour of witchcraft:
-the crime was clearly proved, and the poor
-culprit suffered according to law. In credulity and
-superstition there is something epidemical. The contagion
-spread; and this being found a summary process
-for removing a competitor in trade, or revenging
-an insult, informations for sorcery became frequent.
-Their sessions-house was crowded with witches, as is
-that at the Old Bailey with pickpockets. It however
-brought fees, and so far was well: but these sapient
-legislators at length discovered that the province was
-likely to be depopulated; and what affected them
-still more, their own fraternity were liable to the
-consequences. A man, who had been cheated by
-his lawyer, made an affidavit that said lawyer was
-a wizard. This was too much: the court had a
-special meeting, and unanimously determined that
-they would not receive any more informations against
-wizards. The bye-law had the effect of a charm,
-and sorcery was no more!</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_165" id="Page_165">[165]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Lord Bacon somewhere remarks that superstition
-is worse than atheism. It takes from religion every
-attraction, every comfort; and the place of humble
-hope and patient resignation is supplied by melancholy,
-despair, and madness!</p>
-
-<p>To the best minds, credulity is the source of much
-misery. Our first Charles, who, with all his errors as
-a king, had the manners and mind of a gentleman,
-was so much under its influence, that he never enjoyed
-a day's happiness after consulting the <cite lang="la" xml:lang="la">Sortes
-Virgilianæ</cite>.<a name="FNanchor_116_116" id="FNanchor_116_116"></a><a href="#Footnote_116_116" class="fnanchor">[116]</a></p>
-
-<p>In our age&mdash;an age in many respects enlightened
-by the beams of philosophy&mdash;the effects resulting from
-credulity, superstition, and fanaticism are dreadful;
-but while the evils are contemplated with horror, the
-system is too ridiculous for sober reasoning. It induces
-the infatuated votary to believe that being in
-the pale of a particular church will ensure his salvation.
-The ignorant are confounded with metaphysical
-subtleties which the wisest cannot comprehend;
-and by combining different texts of holy writ, we<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_166" id="Page_166">[166]</a></span>
-are insulted with conclusions contrary to common
-sense.<a name="FNanchor_117_117" id="FNanchor_117_117"></a><a href="#Footnote_117_117" class="fnanchor">[117]</a></p>
-
-<p>To check this inundation of absurdity, which deemed
-carnal reason profane, and was not to be combated by
-argument, Mr. Hogarth engraved this print; it contains
-what must ever operate as a complete refutation
-of those who, because they were his opponents in
-politics, have impudently asserted that he lost his
-talents in the decline of life: for though the delineation
-was made in his sixty-fourth year, in satire, wit,
-and imagination, it is superior to any of his preceding
-works.</p>
-
-<p>The text "I speak as a fool" is a type of the
-preacher, whose strength of lungs is a convenient
-substitute for strength of argument. He is literally a<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_167" id="Page_167">[167]</a></span>
-Boanerges; his tones rend the region, and the thunder
-of his eloquence has cracked the sounding-board. His
-right hand poises a witch astride upon a broom-stick,
-and in his left he suspends an emissary of Satan: this
-embryotic demon wields a gridiron as a terror to the
-ungodly, and at the witch's breast is an incubus in the
-shape of a cat.<a name="FNanchor_118_118" id="FNanchor_118_118"></a><a href="#Footnote_118_118" class="fnanchor">[118]</a> Considering action as the first requisite
-of an orator, our ecclesiastical juggler throws
-his whole frame into convulsions: he shakes as the
-lofty cedar in a storm. Like Milton's devil,</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container"><div class="poetry">
-<p class="verseq">"With head, hands, wings, or feet, he works his way,</p>
-<p class="verse">And swims, or sinks, or wades, or creeps, or flies."</p>
-</div></div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_168" id="Page_168">[168]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>By these violent agitations his gown flies open, and
-discovers that this Proteus of the pulpit is arrayed in
-a Harlequin's jacket; and his wig falling off, displays
-the shaven crown of a Jesuit. But the loss of
-a periwig is not attended to, his denunciations are
-redoubled, his fulminations hurled indiscriminately
-around; he scatters about firebrands; and darts,
-pointed with destruction, and barbed with death,
-pierce the hearts of his terrified hearers. Wrought
-up to the highest pitch of seraphic fervour, fevered
-by the heat of his own ecstasies,&mdash;the whole man is
-inspired,&mdash;and mounted upon the clouds of mystery,
-he soars through the dark regions of superstition,
-settles in the third heaven, and breathes empyreal air.</p>
-
-<p>The train is fired,&mdash;the contagion spreads, the cup
-of delusion is filled to the brim, and each of his infatuated
-auditors intoxicated with the fumes of enthusiastic
-madness.</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container"><div class="poetry">
-<p class="verse5">"Broken each link of reason's chain,</p>
-<p class="verse">Witchcraft and magic hold their reign;</p>
-<p class="verse">Terror and comfortless despair,</p>
-<p class="verse">And fond credulity is there.</p>
-<p class="verse">Circling all nature's vast profound,</p>
-<p class="verse">Imagination takes her round,</p>
-<p class="verse">Starting at spectres,&mdash;painting fairies,</p>
-<p class="verse">Fancy, with all her wild vagaries,</p>
-<p class="verse">Dances on enchanted ground.</p>
-<p class="verse">Now with wings sublime she flies</p>
-<p class="verse">Where planets roll in azure skies;</p>
-<p class="verse">Now o'er clouds where tempests low'r,</p>
-<p class="verse">To where the rushing waters pour:</p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_169" id="Page_169">[169]</a></span>
-<p class="verse">Thence through the vasty void descends,</p>
-<p class="verse">Where Chaos warring atoms blends,</p>
-<p class="verse">To darksome caves of deepest hell,</p>
-<p class="verse">Where sullen ghosts and torturing demons dwell."</p>
-</div></div>
-
-<p>With a postboy's cap upon his head, to denote that
-he is a special messenger from above, a little cherubimic
-Mercury flies through the clouds, and bears in
-his mouth an express directed to Saint Money Trapp.</p>
-
-<p>Immediately beneath the pulpit are two lambs of
-the flock in an ecstasy. The young man with a round
-head of hair is probably a lay preacher; for though
-he has not a sable coat, he has a black collar. Piously
-entreating a young maiden, who meets his advances
-with an holy zeal, he puts the waxen model of a
-female saint down her bosom.</p>
-
-<p>In the same pew are two fellows very differently
-affected: one of them, with a despairing countenance,
-sheds iron tears; the other, like the wet sea-boy on
-the mast, sleeps through the terrors of the storm,
-though a malignant imp of darkness, envying his
-serenity, endeavours to awake him by a whisper,<a name="FNanchor_119_119" id="FNanchor_119_119"></a><a href="#Footnote_119_119" class="fnanchor">[119]</a> that
-he also may share such curses as would serve for a
-supplement to St. Ernulphus.<a name="FNanchor_120_120" id="FNanchor_120_120"></a><a href="#Footnote_120_120" class="fnanchor">[120]</a></p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_170" id="Page_170">[170]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Between two duck-winged cherubs, who are studying
-the laughing and crying gamut, is the harpy clerk.
-This crook-mouthed echo of absurdity, and associate
-in villany, has the true physiognomy of a Tartuffe:
-every feature is charged with hypocrisy.</p>
-
-<p>The congregation,<a name="FNanchor_121_121" id="FNanchor_121_121"></a><a href="#Footnote_121_121" class="fnanchor">[121]</a> many of whom have been imported
-from Liffey's verdant banks, bear their parts
-in this enchanting serenade; and the bull roar of the
-preacher, combined with a chorus of sighs, groans,
-and shrieks, must produce a symphony that might
-vie with the Irish howl or Indian war-whoop.</p>
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_171" id="Page_171">[171]</a></span></p>
-<p>Among the crowd we discover a youthful convert
-under the guidance of his spiritual confessor,<a name="FNanchor_122_122" id="FNanchor_122_122"></a><a href="#Footnote_122_122" class="fnanchor">[122]</a> who,
-pointing to Brimstone Ocean, unfolds a tale which
-terrifies his disciple to a degree that</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container"><div class="poetry">
-<p class="verseq">"Must harrow up his soul; freeze his young blood;</p>
-<p class="verse">Make his two eyes like stars start from their spheres;</p>
-<p class="verse">His knotty and combined locks to part,</p>
-<p class="verse">And each particular hair to stand on end,</p>
-<p class="verse">Like quills upon the fretful porcupine."</p>
-</div></div>
-
-<p>The sanguinary Jew, while he leans upon an altar,
-on which lies a knife inscribed "bloody," sacrifices to
-his revenge an unfortunate insect which he caught
-carelessly wandering on the environs of his head.</p>
-
-<p>Beneath is Mrs. Tofts, of Godalming, well known
-in the annals of credulity; in the violence of her
-paroxysm, she breaks a dram glass with her teeth.<a name="FNanchor_123_123" id="FNanchor_123_123"></a><a href="#Footnote_123_123" class="fnanchor">[123]</a></p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_172" id="Page_172">[172]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Next to Mrs. Tofts is a possessed shoeblack, coolly
-clearing his stomach of a quantity of hob-nails and
-iron staples.<a name="FNanchor_124_124" id="FNanchor_124_124"></a><a href="#Footnote_124_124" class="fnanchor">[124]</a> In his hand he holds a quart bottle,
-in which the model of a spirit is closely cribbed&mdash;confin'd;<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_173" id="Page_173">[173]</a></span>
-but the imprisoned sprite forcing the cork,
-mounts into the regions of air with a lighted taper
-in its hand.<a name="FNanchor_125_125" id="FNanchor_125_125"></a><a href="#Footnote_125_125" class="fnanchor">[125]</a> The book on which our sable professor
-of necromancy has deposited his basket, is King
-James's <cite>Demonology</cite>;<a name="FNanchor_126_126" id="FNanchor_126_126"></a><a href="#Footnote_126_126" class="fnanchor">[126]</a> this, with Whitfield's <cite>Journal</cite>,
-which lies among the implements of his art, covertly
-intimate the sources where he had sought and found
-inspiration.</p>
-
-<p>The ridicule is wound up by a Turk, whom we see
-through a window smoking his tube of Trinidado;
-lifting up his eyes with astonishment at the scene,
-he breathes a grateful ejaculation, and thanks his
-Maker that he was early initiated in the divine truths
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_174" id="Page_174">[174]</a></span>of the Koran, is out of the pale of this church, and
-has his name engraven on the tablets of Mahomet.</p>
-
-<p>As all the decorations which are displayed in this
-temple of credulity, superstition, and fanaticism are
-suitable to the congregation, the carved figures on
-the pulpit are worthy of the preacher. We are in
-the first compartment presented with the apparition
-which warned Sir George Villiers of the Duke of
-Buckingham's danger from the knife of Felton;<a name="FNanchor_127_127" id="FNanchor_127_127"></a><a href="#Footnote_127_127" class="fnanchor">[127]</a> in
-the second, with Julius Cæsar's ghost reproaching
-Brutus; and in the third, with the ghost of Mrs. Veale,
-which appeared to Mrs. Bargrave,<a name="FNanchor_128_128" id="FNanchor_128_128"></a><a href="#Footnote_128_128" class="fnanchor">[128]</a>&mdash;because a very
-large impression of <cite>Drelincourt upon Death</cite> lay in the
-bookseller's warehouse, and would not move without
-a marvellous relation of an apparition.</p>
-
-<p>Beneath is a figure of the Tedworth drummer, who
-so wickedly disturbed the family of Mr. Mompesson;<a name="FNanchor_129_129" id="FNanchor_129_129"></a><a href="#Footnote_129_129" class="fnanchor">[129]</a>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_175" id="Page_175">[175]</a></span>and in the frame below, a representation of Fanny,
-the phantom of Cock Lane, with her hammer in her
-right hand. These two notable memorials of credulity
-are placed as a kind of headpiece to a mental thermometer,
-which ascertains the different degrees of
-heat in the blood of an enthusiast. When the liquid<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_176" id="Page_176">[176]</a></span>
-ascends, it rises from lukewarm to love-heat,&mdash;ecstasy!
-convulsion fits,&mdash;madness,&mdash;and terminates
-in raving, which is properly obscured by clouds, and
-above the ken of human comprehension. In its falling
-state, the progress of religious depression is most accurately
-marked. From low spirits it sinks to sorrow,
-agony, settled grief, despair, madness,&mdash;suicide! The
-whole rests on Wesley's <cite>Sermons</cite>, and Glanville <cite>On
-Witches</cite>.<a name="FNanchor_130_130" id="FNanchor_130_130"></a><a href="#Footnote_130_130" class="fnanchor">[130]</a></p>
-
-<p>On the preacher's left hand, suspended to a ring<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_177" id="Page_177">[177]</a></span>
-inserted in a human nostril, hangs the scale of vociferation.
-A <em>natural tone</em> is at the bottom, but the
-<em>speaker's tone</em> is described by the distended mouth
-above the scale, crying Blood! blood! blood! and
-inscribed "Bull roar."</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_178" id="Page_178">[178]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>To the hook of the chandelier hangs a small sphere,
-on which is engraven, "Desarts of new Purgatory."
-On the globe, out of which spring the branches
-for candles, is written, "A globe of hell, as newly<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_179" id="Page_179">[179]</a></span>
-drawn by R&mdash;&mdash;ne" (Romaine). It is so formed as
-to give the caricature of a human face, and baptized
-"Horrid Zone." Round one of the eyes is inscribed
-"The Bottomless Pit;" round the other, "Molten-lead
-Lake." On one cheek is "Brimstone Ocean;" on
-the other, "Parts Unknown;" and round the mouth,
-"Eternal Damnation Gulf." Horribly profane as are
-these mottoes, they are mere copies of Tabernacle
-phraseology. In the same class comes the hymn,
-which is placed before the clerk:</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container"><div class="poetry">
-<p class="verseq">"Only <em>love</em> to us be given;</p>
-<p class="verse">Lord, we ask no other heaven."<a name="FNanchor_131_131" id="FNanchor_131_131"></a><a href="#Footnote_131_131" class="fnanchor">[131]</a></p>
-</div></div>
-
-<p>The poor's box is a mouse-trap, which very fairly
-intimates that whatever money is deposited will be
-secured for the <em>faithful collectors</em>. It may be further
-meant to insinuate, that whosoever is caught in this
-necromantic snare will be in the state of Sterne's
-starling, and cannot get out, for it is planted with
-pointed steel, and tears in pieces those who attempt
-an escape.</p>
-
-<p class="p4" />
-<div class="figcenter">
-<img src="images/end_179.jpg" alt="" />
-</div>
-
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_180" id="Page_180">[180]</a></span></p>
-
-<h3>THE TIMES.</h3>
-
-<p class="p2" />
-<h4>PLATE I.</h4>
-
-<div class="poetry-container"><div class="poetry">
-<p class="verseq">"The gods of old were logs of wood,</p>
-<p class="verse4">And worship was to puppets paid:</p>
-<p class="verse">In antic dress the puppet stood,</p>
-<p class="verse4">And priests and people bow'd the head."</p>
-</div></div>
-
-<p class="p2" />
-<div class="figcenter">
-<a name="TT_I" id="TT_I"></a>
-<img src="images/i_180fp.jpg" width="650" alt="" />
-<div class="caption">THE TIMES. PLATE I.</div>
-</div>
-
-<div>
-<img class="drop-cap" src="images/dc_180.jpg" alt="" />
-</div>
-
-<p class="drop-capx">There are three things of which your
-Englishman deems himself the best of all
-possible judges: the art of stirring a
-fire, religion, and politics. His infallibility in the
-first no one will presume to question, except his wife;
-and with her he will dispute as long as disputing is
-good. The mysteries of the second he understands
-better than the Archbishop of Canterbury. As to the
-intricacies of the third, which thinking men are apt
-to consider in some degree hidden from those who are
-not admitted into the arcana, he can unravel them
-with more ease, and point out with more precision
-what steps ought to be taken, than can the Prime
-Minister, with all the aggregate wisdom of the
-Cabinet.</p>
-
-<p>So many of his Majesty's good subjects being thus
-gifted with an intuitive knowledge of state affairs, it
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_181" id="Page_181">[181]</a></span>is no wonder that Britain holds so high a rank among
-the nations; for each act of government is stated and
-debated, not only in the two Houses of Parliament,
-but in every tavern, coffeehouse, and porter-house in
-the metropolis.</p>
-
-<p>To these eloquent leaders of the numerous clubs,
-we may add a myriad of political writers, who are all
-but inspired. Without studying either Machiavel,
-Locke, or Sidney, they pour forth a torrent of
-lucubrations on the floating subjects of the hour;
-that hour past, their letters, replies, remarks, and
-rejoinders are heard of no more.</p>
-
-<p>In the hope of giving their puny offspring a longer
-life, some of these learned Thebans, or their booksellers,
-called in the aid of artists, to adorn their
-labours with <em>taking</em> frontispieces. These graphic
-ornaments were in general about as <em>lively</em> as the
-pamphlets they decorated; and it was found that the
-united efforts of author, printer, painter, engraver, and
-publisher, could not ensure immortality. Notwithstanding
-this general failure in their intended operation,
-they had one very awkward effect. A sort of
-political influenza was communicated to our engravers,
-and they also became deep statesmen and profound
-politicians. While part of this band sharpened their
-burins, and defaced much good copper in caricaturing
-the members of administration, their opponents were
-equally industrious, and equally pointed, in <em>taking off</em><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_182" id="Page_182">[182]</a></span>
-the <em>honourable gentlemen</em> on the other side of the
-house.</p>
-
-<p>The buzzing of these insects of a day was little
-attended to: their dulness preserved them from
-laughter, their weakness protected them from resentment;
-they excited no passion except contempt.</p>
-
-<p>Very different was the public expectation when it
-was found that Hogarth intended to publish a series
-of political prints. From his former productions they
-knew his powers, and considered him as able to throw
-any party into ridicule. That which he was expected
-to attack dreaded the strength of his aquafortis,
-which they apprehended would have the effect of a
-caustic, not only on his copper, but on the objects of
-his satire.</p>
-
-<p>Previous to the publication of "The Times," Mr.
-Wilkes, who was then at Aylesbury, was informed
-that the print was political, and that Lord Temple,
-Mr. Pitt, Mr. Churchill, and himself, were the leading
-characters held up to ridicule. Under the impression
-which this intelligence conveyed, he sent Mr. Hogarth
-a remonstrance, stating the ungenerous tendency of
-such a proceeding; which would be more glaringly
-unfriendly, as the two last-mentioned gentlemen and
-the artist had always lived upon terms of strict
-intimacy. This produced a reply, in which Hogarth
-asserted that neither Mr. Wilkes nor Mr. Churchill
-were introduced, but Lord Temple and Mr. Pitt were,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_183" id="Page_183">[183]</a></span>
-and the print should be published in a few days. To
-this it was answered, that Mr. Wilkes would hardly
-deem it worth while to notice any reflections on himself;
-but if his friends were attacked, it would wound
-him in the most sensible part, and, well as he was
-able, he should revenge their cause. This was a
-direct declaration of war: the black flag was hoisted
-on both sides, and never did two angry men of their
-abilities throw mud with less dexterity.</p>
-
-<p>"The Times" was soon after published, and on the
-Saturday following, in No. 17 of the <cite>North Briton</cite>, a
-most unmerciful attack was directed against the King's
-Serjeant Painter. Since that period, marvellous have
-been the variations of the patriotic needle; the
-Colonel of the Buckinghamshire Militia has filled the
-first offices in the city of London, and is now become
-chamberlain. Having in these situations seen the
-errors of his former politics, he would, I must think,
-be the first to acknowledge that the attack was not
-only unmerciful, but in many respects unjust. The
-hand of time having worn down political asperities, I
-hope&mdash;I believe&mdash;Mr. Wilkes will have no objection
-to this nettle, forced in the hotbed of a party, being
-plucked from that hallowed sod which covers the dust
-of William Hogarth.</p>
-
-<p>Should the artist and the chamberlain meet in
-Elysium, why may they not drink oblivion to former
-feuds in a glass of Lethe? The chamberlain would,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_184" id="Page_184">[184]</a></span>
-I fancy, prefer champagne; but when a gentleman
-travels in a strange country, he must take up with
-such beverage as the place affords.</p>
-
-<p>The attack commences with a ridicule of the
-<cite>Analysis of Beauty</cite>, or rather of Hogarth's honesty
-in acknowledging that he was indebted to a friend
-for a third part of the wording. The artist was
-sensible of his own strength; but what is much more
-rare, he was conscious of his own weakness. He knew
-the principles of his art; but not being accustomed to
-explaining them with a pen, very prudently asked
-the aid of those who were, to give his ideas such
-language as would render them worthy public attention.
-This was at least honest; but as the author
-of the <cite>North Briton</cite> presents us with only part of the
-apology, let us do the artist justice by inserting the
-whole.</p>
-
-<p>After some leading remarks on the system which it
-was his wish to establish, he continues as follows:&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>"But observing in the fore-mentioned controversies
-that the torrent generally ran against me, and that
-several of my opponents had turned my arguments
-into ridicule, yet were daily availing themselves of their
-use, and venting them even to my face as their own, I
-began to wish the publication of something on this
-subject; and accordingly applied myself to several
-of my friends, whom I thought capable of taking up
-the pen for me, offering to furnish them with materials<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_185" id="Page_185">[185]</a></span>
-by word of mouth. But finding this method not practicable,
-from the difficulty of one man's expressing
-the ideas of another, especially on a subject which he
-was either unacquainted with, or was new in its kind,
-I was therefore reduced to an attempt of finding such
-words as would best answer my own ideas, being
-now too far engaged to drop the design. Hereupon,
-having digested the matter as well as I could, and
-thrown it into the form of a book, I submitted it to
-the judgment of such friends whose sincerity and
-abilities I could best rely on, determining on their
-approbation or dislike to publish or destroy it. But
-their favourable opinion of the manuscript being publicly
-known, it gave such a credit to the undertaking
-as soon changed the countenances of those who had
-a better opinion of my pencil than my pen, and turned
-their sneers into expectation, especially when the
-same friends had kindly made me an offer of conducting
-the work through the press; and here I must acknowledge
-myself particularly indebted to one gentleman
-for his corrections and amendments of at least
-a third part of the wording. Through his absence
-and avocation, several sheets went to the press without
-any assistance, and the rest had the occasional
-inspection of one or two friends. If any inaccuracies
-shall be found in the writing, I shall readily acknowledge
-them all my own, and am, I confess, under no
-great concern about them, provided the matter in<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_186" id="Page_186">[186]</a></span>
-general may be useful and answerable, in the application
-of it, to truth and to nature; in which material
-points if the reader shall think fit to rectify any
-mistakes, it will give me a sensible pleasure, and be
-doing great honour to the work."&mdash;<cite>Preface to Analysis</cite>,
-p. 20, edit of 1772.</p>
-
-<p>The author of the <cite>North Briton</cite> continues: "We all
-titter the instant he takes up a pen, but we tremble
-when we see the pencil in his hand."</p>
-
-<p>As this essay was written in consequence of the
-artist giving a pictured shape, it seems rather extraordinary
-that so good a logician as Mr. Wilkes should
-drag in Hogarth's pen merely to titter at, and acknowledge
-that he trembles at his pencil, which instrument,
-by the way, drew forth this paper:&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>"I will do him the justice to say, that he possesses
-the rare talent of gibbeting in colours, and that in
-most of his works he has been a very good moral
-satirist." That he has, it is most true. "His forte is
-there, and he should have kept it. When he has at
-any time deviated from his own peculiar walk, he
-has never failed to make himself perfectly ridiculous.
-I need only make my appeal to any one of his historical
-or portrait pieces, which are now considered
-as almost beneath all criticism."</p>
-
-<p><em>Some</em> of his portraits might have been exempted
-from this censure: what does Mr. Wilkes think of
-Captain Coram, now in the Foundling Hospital?</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_187" id="Page_187">[187]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>"The favourite 'Sigismunda,' the labour of so
-many years, the boasted effort of his art, was not
-human. If the figure had a resemblance of anything
-ever on earth, or had the least pretence to
-meaning or expression, it was what he had seen, or
-perhaps made, in real life, his own wife in an agony
-of passion, but of what passion no connoisseur could
-guess."</p>
-
-<p>After asserting that the figure was not human,
-this is rather too much! From any gentleman, the
-daughter of Sir James Thornhill had a claim to more
-politeness; but that so gallant a man as Colonel
-Wilkes&mdash;a perfect knight-errant in all that related
-to the sex&mdash;should make an estimable and respectable
-woman a party "in the poor politics of the day, and
-descend to low personal abuse" (I use his own language),
-because her husband had in these poor politics
-adopted an opposite creed, excites astonishment!</p>
-
-<p>Had this transaction passed in the year 1791, instead
-of the year 1762, it would have been less extraordinary;
-for, alas,</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container"><div class="poetry">
-<p class="verse">"The days of chivalry are no more."<a name="FNanchor_132_132" id="FNanchor_132_132"></a><a href="#Footnote_132_132" class="fnanchor">[132]</a></p>
-</div></div>
-
-<p>"All his friends remember what tiresome discourses
-were held by him, day after day, about the transcendent
-merit of this 'Sigismunda,' and how the great
-names of Raphael, Vandyke, and others, were made<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_188" id="Page_188">[188]</a></span>
-to yield the palm of beauty, grace, expression, etc. to
-him, for this long-laboured yet uninteresting single
-figure. The value he himself set on this, as well as
-on some other of his works, almost exceeds belief;
-yet from politeness, or fear, or some other motives,
-he has actually been paid the most astonishing sums,
-as the price, not of his merit, but of his unbounded
-vanity."</p>
-
-<p>That the artist demanded too high a price for his
-painting of "Sigismunda," I am free to acknowledge;
-but it has not been peculiar to Mr. Hogarth to mistake
-his talents, and overrate his worst performances.
-Mr. Wilkes must know that Milton, and many other
-great men, have erred in the same way. I do not
-think that "Sigismunda" was worth what he required;
-but that he has actually been paid the most
-astonishing sums for his other pictures, as the price,
-not of his merit, but of his unbounded vanity, I am
-yet to learn. The remuneration he received for many
-of his works is to be found in these volumes; it was
-seldom in any degree equal to their merits. The
-painter is no more, but several of his pictures remain;
-and were the "Marriage à la Mode," "Rake's
-Progress," etc., now upon sale, the present age would,
-I am persuaded, sanction my opinion, and the pictures
-produce much more astonishing sums than were
-originally paid to the artist.</p>
-
-<p>"He has succeeded very happily in the way of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_189" id="Page_189">[189]</a></span>
-humour, and has miscarried in every other attempt;
-this has arisen in some measure from his head, but
-much more from his heart. After 'Marriage à la
-Mode,' the public wished for a series of prints of a
-Happy Marriage. Hogarth made the attempt; but
-the rancour and malevolence of his mind made him
-soon turn away with envy and disgust from objects of
-so pleasing contemplation, to dwell, and feast a bad
-heart, on others of a hateful cast, which he pursued,
-for he found them congenial, with the most unabating
-zeal and unrelenting gall."</p>
-
-<p>Should any one assert that the strength of colouring,
-and astonishing powers, which gave the name of
-Churchill so exalted a rank among satirists, originated
-in malevolence and rancour, and that he could not
-write a panegyric because he delighted in feasting a
-bad heart on a bad theme, Mr. Wilkes would, I am
-certain, be the first to defend him from such an
-aspersion.</p>
-
-<p>That he did not succeed in an attempt to delineate
-a Happy Marriage, I can readily believe. Hogarth
-was a painter of manners as they were, not as they
-ought to be. He considered nature in the abstract,
-and usually adhered to what he saw. Among those
-friends with whom Hogarth lived in habits of intimacy,
-and whose domestic situations he had the best
-opportunity of studying,&mdash;though Mr. Churchill and
-the Colonel were of the number,&mdash;he might not<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_190" id="Page_190">[190]</a></span>
-know a family from whence such a scene could be
-copied.</p>
-
-<p>"I have observed some time his setting sun. He
-has long been very dim, and almost shorn of his
-beams."</p>
-
-<p>For a confirmation of the above assertion, see the
-print of "The Medley," published this very year. My
-opinion of it the reader is already in possession of,
-and that opinion corresponds with an authority which,
-I believe, even Mr. Wilkes will consider as very high:&mdash;"For
-useful and deep satire, 'The Medley' is the
-most sublime of all Hogarth's works."&mdash;<em>Walpole.</em></p>
-
-<p>"He seems so conscious of this (<em>i.e.</em> that his sun is
-setting, etc.) that he now glimmers with borrowed light.
-'John Bull's house in flames' has been hackneyed in
-fifty different prints; and if there is any merit in the
-figure on stilts, and the mob prancing around, it is
-not to be ascribed to Hogarth, but to Callot."</p>
-
-<p>Callot's was, I acknowledge, the first thought, but
-Sir Joshua Reynolds will tell Mr. Wilkes that happy
-appropriation is not plagiarism.</p>
-
-<p>"I own, too, that I am grieved to see the genius of
-Hogarth, which should take in all ages and countries,
-sunk to a level with the miserable tribe of party-etchers,
-and now in his rapid decline entering into the
-poor politics of the faction of the day, and descending
-into low personal abuse, instead of instructing the
-world, as he could once, by manly moral satire."</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_191" id="Page_191">[191]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>I too am grieved that Hogarth, or any other man
-of talents, should descend to the poor politics of the
-faction of the day. But be it remarked, that this
-was the first political print he designed; and if so
-contemptible as it was before stated to be, it is rather
-singular that this one little satire, the first he engraved
-on the subject, and "destitute of every kind of original
-merit, in every part confused, perplexed, and embarrassed,
-where the story is not well told to the
-eye, and where we cannot discover the faintest ray
-of genius," should excite so warm a resentment.</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Wilkes goes on to ask, "Whence can proceed
-so surprising a change? Is it from the frowardness of
-old age? or is it that envy and impatience of resplendent
-merit in every way, at which he has always
-sickened? How often has he been remarked to droop
-at the fair and honest applause given even to a friend?"
-etc.</p>
-
-<p>I am told, by those who lived in habits of intimacy
-with Mr. Hogarth&mdash;never! But let us remember, that
-what is deemed fair and honest applause by the person
-who receives it, may by an impartial spectator be
-thought more than he is entitled to.</p>
-
-<p>"It is sufficient that the rest of mankind applaud;
-from that moment he begins the attack, and you never
-can be well with him, till he hears an universal outcry
-against you, and till all your friends have given you
-up."</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_192" id="Page_192">[192]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>That Hogarth should have wished to render a man
-infamous in the eyes of society, before he would admit
-him to the honour of his regards, is a paradox I
-cannot solve. I believe this kind of preparation for
-friendship was never practised by any other person,
-of any age or country.</p>
-
-<p>"The public had never the least share of Hogarth's
-regard, or even goodwill. Gain and vanity have
-steered his little bark quite through life. He has
-never been consistent but with respect to these two
-principles."</p>
-
-<p>Hogarth was no hypocrite. By the word "public,"
-is frequently meant that party who are immersed in
-the violent factions of the day. For them he never
-professed goodwill. But if by the public is meant
-society in its various branches and different ranks,
-almost all his works had as great a tendency to
-make the world wiser and better, as had those of
-men who made more violent professions. His little
-bark having been steered through life by gain and
-vanity, I hardly know how to understand. He lived
-a long and laborious life; he was admitted to be
-the first, the very first, in his walk; and died worth
-a sum that a Jew broker will acquire before breakfast.
-As to vanity,&mdash;of talents superior to any other artist,&mdash;he
-had a right to be vain.</p>
-
-<p>"But all genius was not born, nor will it die, with
-Mr. Hogarth; and notwithstanding all his ungenerous<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_193" id="Page_193">[193]</a></span>
-efforts to damp or chill it in another, I will trust to a
-discerning and liberal spirit in the English nation to
-patronize and reward all real merit. It will in the
-end rise superior to the idle laugh of the hour," etc.</p>
-
-<p>Of this discerning and liberal spirit there is not
-a stronger instance than the estimation in which
-Hogarth's works, not excepting the <cite>Analysis</cite> (however
-it may be worded), are held thirty years after
-the publication of the <cite>North Briton</cite>.</p>
-
-<p>"In the year 1746, when the Guards were ordered
-to march to Finchley on the most important service
-they could be employed in,&mdash;the extinguishing a
-Scottish rebellion which threatened the entire ruin of
-the illustrious family on the throne, and, in consequence,
-of our liberties,&mdash;Mr. Hogarth came out with a
-print to make them ridiculous<a name="FNanchor_133_133" id="FNanchor_133_133"></a><a href="#Footnote_133_133" class="fnanchor">[133]</a> to their countrymen,
-and to all Europe; or, perhaps, it rather was to tell the
-Scots, in his way, how little the Guards were to be
-feared, and that they might safely advance. That the
-ridicule might not stop here, and that it might be as
-offensive as possible to his own sovereign, he dedicated
-the print to the King of Prussia, as an encourager of
-arts. Is this patriotism? In old Rome, or in any of
-the Grecian States, he would have been punished as a
-profligate citizen, totally devoid of all principle."</p>
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_194" id="Page_194">[194]</a></span></p>
-<p>These are heavy charges; but mark how a plain
-tale shall put them down. From the effects which
-are described as likely to result from this most seditious
-print, we are tempted to think it must have
-been designed, etched, engraved, printed off, and dispersed
-with so much expedition as to arrive in Scotland
-before the Guards whom it holds up to ridicule;
-for one of its designs was "to tell the Scots, in his
-way, how little the Guards were to be feared, and that
-they might safely advance." The march was in 1746,
-and the publication of this print in 1750; therefore<a name="FNanchor_134_134" id="FNanchor_134_134"></a><a href="#Footnote_134_134" class="fnanchor">[134]</a>
-it could not have these most direful and dangerous
-effects! That he dedicated it to the King of
-Prussia, as an encourager of arts, is true; but this
-dedication was not inserted until another had been
-rejected, because it was misunderstood by the King
-of England; and George the Second, with all his
-virtues, was neither a judge of humour nor an encourager
-of the arts. These premises granted, I
-think we may fairly draw this conclusion: Had old
-Hogarth been a citizen of old Rome, or a member
-of any of the Grecian States, and published such a
-representation of his own times, he would not have
-been punished as a profligate citizen: he would
-neither have been flagellated, impaled, decollated, nor
-thrown from the Tarpeian rock; but his print would
-have been laughed at by every member of the State<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_195" id="Page_195">[195]</a></span>
-who had the least ray of humour, though&mdash;as in
-some cases that we have seen&mdash;the length of a grave
-orator's beard might hide the risible emotions of his
-muscles, and the amplitude of his robe conceal the
-shaking of his sides.</p>
-
-<p>To detail the conclusion of this paper, about the
-dishonour of his being appointed pannel-painter to
-the King, never suffered to caricature any of the royal
-family, etc., is scarcely necessary. If the appointment
-was less respectable than his merits demanded, the
-disgrace did not fall upon him; but be it remarked,
-that the office was afterwards held by Sir Joshua
-Reynolds; and however elevated his taste, however
-superior his talents, his genius was long distinguished
-and admired by the public before he had
-the honour of taking the portraits of their Majesties.</p>
-
-<p>Trusting that Hogarth's own works will sufficiently
-ascertain his character, I shall not attempt his further
-vindication, but proceed to the print.</p>
-
-<p>A globe, which must here be considered as the
-world, though it appears to be no more than a tavern
-sign, is represented on fire, and Mr. Pitt, exalted on
-stilts, which are held by the surrounding multitude,
-blowing up the flames with a pair of large bellows.<a name="FNanchor_135_135" id="FNanchor_135_135"></a><a href="#Footnote_135_135" class="fnanchor">[135]</a><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_196" id="Page_196">[196]</a></span>
-His attendants are composed of butchers, with marrow-bones
-and cleavers, an hallooing mob armed with<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_197" id="Page_197">[197]</a></span>
-clubs, and a trio of London aldermen in the act of
-adoration. From the neck of this idol of the populace<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_198" id="Page_198">[198]</a></span>
-is suspended a millstone, on which is inscribed
-£3000 per annum, allusive to his pension, and intimating
-that so ponderous a load must in time sink<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_199" id="Page_199">[199]</a></span>
-his popularity.<a name="FNanchor_136_136" id="FNanchor_136_136"></a><a href="#Footnote_136_136" class="fnanchor">[136]</a> While he is thus increasing the
-conflagration, a number of Highlanders,<a name="FNanchor_137_137" id="FNanchor_137_137"></a><a href="#Footnote_137_137" class="fnanchor">[137]</a> grenadiers,
-sailors, etc., are busily working a fire-engine to extinguish
-it. The pipe is guided by a Union Office
-fireman at the top. Defended by an iron cap, and
-decorated with a badge inscribed "G. R.," this intrepid
-engineer pays no regard to three streams of
-water which are furiously driven at his rear from the
-windows of the Temple Coffeehouse. The Liliputian
-engines, through which these tiny showers descend,
-are directed by a nobleman and two garretteers. An
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_200" id="Page_200">[200]</a></span>inscription over the door determines the title of the
-former, who is delineated without features: the two
-gentlemen in the attic were, I believe, originally
-intended for Mr. Wilkes and Mr. Churchill, but
-previous to publication the faces were altered.<a name="FNanchor_138_138" id="FNanchor_138_138"></a><a href="#Footnote_138_138" class="fnanchor">[138]</a> A
-surplice is still left on the figure over Lord Temple,
-and the Colonel's coat is lapelled. Upon a sign-iron
-beneath them is a slaughterman,<a name="FNanchor_139_139" id="FNanchor_139_139"></a><a href="#Footnote_139_139" class="fnanchor">[139]</a> with a lighted
-candle in his hat, and a large knife in his pocket;
-thus intimating that he is ready either to fire a city
-or murder a citizen. Mounted to the situation he
-now occupies by a ladder, he is drawing up a sign
-of the Patriot's Arms, and in this good work is
-assisted by two strong-sinewed coadjutors, who are
-dragging the ropes to which it is suspended. The
-blazonry is four clenched fists in opposition to each
-other; the date, 1762.<a name="FNanchor_140_140" id="FNanchor_140_140"></a><a href="#Footnote_140_140" class="fnanchor">[140]</a> This curious delineation will
-be placed in the front of the Temple Coffeehouse,
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_201" id="Page_201">[201]</a></span>for <em>the world to wonder at</em>. The Newcastle Arms,
-nearly broken down, bears allusion to the Duke's
-resignation.<a name="FNanchor_141_141" id="FNanchor_141_141"></a><a href="#Footnote_141_141" class="fnanchor">[141]</a> A Highlander, carrying two buckets
-of water from the fire-plug to the engine, is likely
-to be impeded by a fellow with a wheelbarrow full
-of political papers, which are intended to feed the
-flames. This type of the distressed poet, said to be
-intended as a representative of the Duke of Newcastle,
-endeavours to overset the Scot, and burst the
-engine-pipe by the same operation.</p>
-
-<p>Wholly engrossed by avarice, the crafty Dutchman,
-with a hand in each pocket and a pipe in his mouth,
-sits on his bales of goods, and laughs at the destruction
-raging around him. A fox, fair emblem of
-his cunning, is creeping out of a kennel beneath.</p>
-
-<p>Close to him is a patriotic trumpeter, blowing the
-spirit-stirring tube, and pointing to a show-cloth, on
-which is painted a wild Indian. By the magisterial
-robe in which this trumpeter is arrayed, and the city
-arms on the banner of his windy instrument, he is decisively
-intended to personify Mr. Alderman Beckford,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_202" id="Page_202">[202]</a></span>
-thrice Lord Mayor of London. Beneath the savage
-to whom he points, is written, "Alive from America."
-This grotesque figure is placed before two tobacco
-hogsheads, grasps in each hand a purse inscribed
-"£1000," and has tied round him, so as to form a
-sort of Indian dress, eight or ten little bags equally
-well filled. His countenance leads us to judge that
-he delights in the devastation by which he is a gainer;
-and seems to imply that our American brethren, like
-our Amsterdam allies, were eager to furnish friend or
-foe with the product of their respective countries. It
-may further intimate the Alderman's immense riches,
-and that a leading article of his trade was tobacco.</p>
-
-<p>A table clock, inscribed "Airs by Harrington,"
-representing a company of soldiers in a regular
-march, has an evident allusion to the military doctrine
-of man being a machine. "The Norfolk jig,
-G. T. <i lang="la" xml:lang="la">fecit</i>," hints at the Norfolk Militia, and Mr.
-George Townshend, who paid unremitting attention
-to the discipline and appearance of the corps raised
-in Norfolk.</p>
-
-<p>"The Post Office," painted on a cracked board
-fastened against the wall, may possibly signify the
-office of Postmaster-General being then divided.<a name="FNanchor_142_142" id="FNanchor_142_142"></a><a href="#Footnote_142_142" class="fnanchor">[142]</a></p>
-
-<p>In the opposite corner of the print, surrounded by<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_203" id="Page_203">[203]</a></span>
-his miserable and famished subjects, sits the heroic
-Frederick of Prussia. Regardless of their distress, and
-unmoved by their cries, tears, and execrations&mdash;like
-Nero, who fiddled while Rome burnt&mdash;he is lost to
-every feeling, except those which arise from the fine
-tones of his Cremona. The effects resulting from his
-insatiable thirst of glory are not confined to his own
-subjects. Fired by vaulting ambition, he scatters
-destruction through surrounding states; depopulates
-provinces, and lays waste kingdoms, to prove himself&mdash;a
-philosopher.</p>
-
-<p>How far the rest of the figures in this group may
-refer to particular persons or nations, I cannot determine.
-The female, with clasped hands and eyes
-raised to heaven, has been supposed to be intended
-for the Empress Queen; a venerable matron, stealing
-away with a trunk under her arm, for the late Empress
-of Russia, Frederick's most inveterate enemy,
-who ended her earthly reign on the 2d of January
-1762. They may be so intended, though I must
-acknowledge I do not discover anything which will
-wholly establish the supposition, but am more inclined
-to consider them as merely exemplifying the horrors
-of war.</p>
-
-<p>The <i lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">fleur-de-lis</i> hung from one of the houses in
-flames, and the black eagle from the other, sufficiently
-indicate the powers intended to be pointed out. The
-sign of the Salutation alludes to the treaty between<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_204" id="Page_204">[204]</a></span>
-France and Spain, for the dexter figure is Louis
-Baboon; and the sinister, Lord Strut.</p>
-
-<p>The flames rage with so much violence as to prevent
-the fluttering dove from alighting on any of the
-buildings; notwithstanding which, this bird of peace,
-with an olive branch, hovers over them in the midst
-of ascending smoke.</p>
-
-<p>The exact point of time is determined by the
-waggon, inscribed "Hermione," in the background.<a name="FNanchor_143_143" id="FNanchor_143_143"></a><a href="#Footnote_143_143" class="fnanchor">[143]</a></p>
-
-<p>Such is my general idea of the preceding plate;<a name="FNanchor_144_144" id="FNanchor_144_144"></a><a href="#Footnote_144_144" class="fnanchor">[144]</a>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_205" id="Page_205">[205]</a></span>there may be those who will discover many things
-which I do not see, and which possibly never entered
-into the contemplation of the artist. As the whole
-alludes to the politics of his own day, all the characters
-introduced were his contemporaries, and several
-of them had been his intimate friends, he might<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_206" id="Page_206">[206]</a></span>
-intentionally leave some parts obscure;<a name="FNanchor_145_145" id="FNanchor_145_145"></a><a href="#Footnote_145_145" class="fnanchor">[145]</a> or conceiving
-his meaning sufficiently obvious to those who lived at
-the time, forget that it would become impervious to
-posterity.</p>
-
-<p>I have before observed that in allegory he was not
-happy; and the dissimilar combinations here brought
-together are a proof of the assertion. Soldiers and
-sailors, whose business it is to increase the flames of
-war, carrying water to extinguish them, is not quite
-consonant to our general ideas of their dispositions.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_207" id="Page_207">[207]</a></span>
-Highlanders, being universally considered as the soldiers
-of Europe, make but an awkward appearance in
-the character of peacemakers.</p>
-
-<p>A sign of the globe on fire, flames bursting out of
-the Globe Tavern and three other buildings, with
-each an alehouse sign, to explain what nations are
-meant, borders upon the bathos. Another nation
-personified by the sovereign fiddling to his expiring
-subjects, is not a bad thought, but here it is incongruous.
-It has not that general unison with the other
-parts of the picture which either writing or painting
-demands. Separated from the accompaniments, this
-group might have made a good print; with the
-Globe Tavern, the Temple Coffeehouse, the garretteers,
-and the aldermen, it does not assimilate.</p>
-
-<p>My last remark I shall take the liberty of borrowing
-from Mr. Wilkes, for in this one point I have the
-honour of agreeing with him: "The print is too much
-crowded with figures."</p>
-
-
-<p class="p2" />
-<h4>PLATE II.</h4>
-
-<p class="pfs80">"The Times are out of joint."</p>
-
-<p class="p2" />
-<div class="figcenter">
-<a name="TT_II" id="TT_II"></a>
-<img src="images/i_208fp.jpg" width="650" alt="" />
-<div class="caption">THE TIMES. PLATE II.</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class="noindent">A painter engaging in the political disputes of his
-day, is in a situation similar to a gentleman beginning
-to rebuild a family mansion. The pencil of one,
-dipped in these troubled streams, or the fingers of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_208" id="Page_208">[208]</a></span>
-the other but touch-brick and mortar,&mdash;it is not in the
-tables of De Moivre to calculate the conclusion of their
-labours. Each of them sets out upon a certain plan,
-determines that he will go so far, and no further: but
-the gentleman is induced to make a first addition to
-his original plan, because it will be more convenient;
-a second, because it will be <i lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">magnifique</i>; and a third
-and fourth <em>must be</em>, because without them the building
-will not be uniform.</p>
-
-<p>The artist engraves a political print, which raises
-an host of enemies, who buzz about him like a nest
-of disturbed hornets. To them, wording not being
-the painter's province, he replies by a second print,
-which produces a second volume of abuse; "another
-and another still succeeds," and he must either sink
-under this load of obloquy, or devote the residue of
-his days to the defence of his character. Such at
-least was the political progress of Hogarth.</p>
-
-<p>By his first print of "The Times" he roused two
-very formidable adversaries, and they treated him
-with as much ceremony as two deputies from the
-Bow Street magistrates would an incendiary or an
-assassin. They did not consider him as a man
-whose conduct it was needful to investigate, or whose
-opinions it was necessary to confute, but as a criminal,
-whose aggravated crimes had outraged every law
-of society, and whom they would therefore drag to the
-place of execution. To defend himself from these
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_209" id="Page_209">[209]</a></span>furious assailants, he had no shield but a copperplate,
-no weapons but a pencil and a burin. The use
-he made of them may be seen in the two last prints;
-but though this was engraved during the time of
-the contest, it was not published while he lived.
-Whether a sudden change in politics, a supposed
-ambiguity in part of his design, or the advice of
-judicious or timid friends, induced him to suppress
-his work, cannot now be ascertained; but whatever
-were the reasons, his widow's respect for his memory
-induced her to adopt the same conduct. She retained
-a reverence for even the dust of her husband, and
-dreaded its being raked from the sepulchre where
-he had been quietly inurned, mixed with the poisonous
-aconite of party, and by sacrilegious hands cast
-into the agitated cauldron of politics. If we add to
-this the specimen of political candour which she had
-experienced in her own person, can we wonder that
-she cautiously avoided whatever could be tortured
-into a provocation to the renewal of hostilities? From
-these considerations she never suffered more than one
-impression to be taken, and that was struck off at the
-earnest request of Lord Exeter.</p>
-
-<p>In withholding this plate from the public she acted
-prudently; in attempting to describe it, I may be
-thought to act otherwise. To enter into a discrimination
-of characters who now live, "or step upon
-ashes which are not yet cold," is liable to invidious<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_210" id="Page_210">[210]</a></span>
-construction. Let it be remembered, that though I
-have endeavoured to point out the characters delineated
-by Hogarth, it does not follow that my
-explanation will always be right.</p>
-
-<p>Though several of the figures are marked in a
-style so obtrusive that they cannot be mistaken,
-there are others where I can only guess at the originals.
-From those who were engaged in the politics
-of that day I have sought information, but their
-communications have been neither important nor
-consistent with each other. They generally ended in
-an acknowledgment, that "in thirty years they had
-forgotten much which they once knew, and which, if
-now recollected, would materially elucidate." To
-this was added what I am compelled to admit, that
-parts of the print are obscure. I have before
-observed that neither politics nor allegory were
-Hogarth's <i lang="la" xml:lang="la">forte</i>, and this delineation was made under
-the impression of resentment.</p>
-
-<p>The exact time of its being engraved I cannot
-positively ascertain, but conjecture it must have been
-some time in the year 1762. A small part of the sky
-was left unfinished, and in that state still remains, as
-the present proprietors would not suffer any other engraver
-to draw a line on the copperplate of Hogarth.</p>
-
-<p>On a pedestal in the centre of the print is a statue
-of the present King in his coronation robes, inscribed
-"A Ramsay delt;" his right hand is placed on his<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_211" id="Page_211">[211]</a></span>
-side, and the left leans upon a plummet, which seems
-to have been Mr. Ramsay's guide in the delineation;
-for the drapery is in squares, decided as the ground
-glass stopper of a decanter, and the whole figure is
-composed of straight lines. Of these upright figures
-Hogarth had given his opinion in the <cite>Analysis</cite>;<a name="FNanchor_146_146" id="FNanchor_146_146"></a><a href="#Footnote_146_146" class="fnanchor">[146]</a> and
-Mr. Ramsay being portrait-painter to his Majesty, a
-post Hogarth thought himself better qualified to fill,
-he took this opportunity of throwing his manner into
-ridicule.<a name="FNanchor_147_147" id="FNanchor_147_147"></a><a href="#Footnote_147_147" class="fnanchor">[147]</a> The head of a lion in <em>bas relief</em> with a
-leaden pipe in his mouth,<a name="FNanchor_148_148" id="FNanchor_148_148"></a><a href="#Footnote_148_148" class="fnanchor">[148]</a> being on the front of the
-pedestal, intimates its connection with a reservoir;
-and the royal statue on the top denotes this to be the
-fountain of honour. The able-bodied figure turning
-a fire-plug is evidently intended for Lord Bute; his
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_212" id="Page_212">[212]</a></span>employment seems to intimate that he has the power
-of accelerating or retarding the stream of royal
-bounty, and wheresoever he willeth it shall flow,
-there it floweth. A baronial escutcheon, keys, stars,
-coronets, croziers, mitres, maces, lie close to the
-pedestal, around which are placed a number of garden
-pots with shrubs. Two rose trees most plentifully
-sprinkled by streams from the fountain of favour
-have been originally inscribed "James <span class="fs80">III.</span>;" but
-James being now blotted out, George is put above it,
-and by a little hyphen beneath the lowest figure,
-marked as belonging to the lowest line. Three
-orange trees have the initials "G. R.," and beneath
-the letters is inscribed "Republican." These also
-receive drops of favour; but a large laurel planted
-in a capacious vase, raised upon the base of a pillar,
-and inscribed "Culloden," is watered by the dew of
-heaven,&mdash;by a copious shower poured from the urn
-of Aquarius. Besides these six flourishing plants,
-there are a number of yew and box trees, clipped
-into true taste by a Dutch gardener. Some of them
-retain their old situations, but an active labourer
-is busily clearing the grounds of all these ancient
-formalities. Many of them he has already wheeled
-out of their places, and thrown into the ditch that
-surrounds the platform, into which situation he is
-now tumbling two venerable box trees of a most
-orderly and regular cut: each of them having the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_213" id="Page_213">[213]</a></span>
-letters G. R., may apply to the favourites either of
-George the First or Second. This I suppose is
-meant to express, by an allegorical figure, the great
-number of old place-men who resigned on the accession
-of his present Majesty.</p>
-
-<p>The late Henry Fox, afterwards Lord Holland,
-being at that time a leading character in the House
-of Commons, and deemed the partisan of Lord Bute,
-is here represented as removing these antiquated
-plants from the vivifying hothouse of royalty to the
-cold and dank ditch of despair. Hogarth, not thinking
-a sable countenance and ebon eyebrows would
-sufficiently indicate the person meant, has given the
-outline of a fox's head to his cap. In his reforming
-business he is somewhat impeded by a garden roller,
-on which is written "£1,000,000,000," meaning possibly
-the national debt. On the platform lies a
-broom, shovel, and rake, necessary implements in
-clearing gardens; and in the surrounding <i lang="la" xml:lang="la">fosse</i> such
-a collection of fantastic <em>nevergreens</em>, as decked the
-pleasure-grounds of our ancient sovereigns, "trimm'd
-with nice art," and cut into the shapes of pyramids,
-fortifications, globes, and birds. On one of them,
-clipped into the form of a human head, is a mask,
-well expressing the taste of our ancestors.</p>
-
-<p>It is observable that Lord Bute and Mr. Henry
-Fox are the only persons on the platform: one of
-these gentlemen was, I believe, supposed to have the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_214" id="Page_214">[214]</a></span>
-highest confidence of his sovereign; and the other,
-a most powerful influence over the people's representatives.</p>
-
-<p>A group in the dexter corner is principally made
-up of members of the Upper House. A senatorial
-figure in the chair under the king's arms is intended
-for Sir John Cust, then Speaker. That beneath him,
-wiping his forehead, evidently from perturbation of
-mind, for William Duke of Cumberland. Below him
-is Lord Mansfield, and still lower Lord Temple,
-presenting his snuff-box to his Grace of Newcastle,
-who had a short time before joined the opposition.
-We also recognise Earl Winchelsea, and George
-Doddington, afterwards Lord Melcombe.</p>
-
-<p>Who are intended to be hinted at by a number
-of persons asleep, I do not know: it, however, proves
-that there were at that period men who were not
-to be kept awake by the most important interests
-of their country. Had this print borne relation to
-the orators of 1790 instead of the speakers of 1762,
-there would have been no cause for astonishment.
-Considering the hour at which our present race of
-senators meet to do business, and that one oration
-frequently lasts from the twilight of evening to the
-crowing of the cock, could it excite wonder if half
-the assembly were under the dominion of Somnus
-before what one of our fashionable prints so familiarly
-calls the peroration?</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_215" id="Page_215">[215]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>On the other side of a rail, intended, I believe, to
-divide the Commons from the Lords, are a number
-of figures firing at the emblem of Peace, which is
-fluttering in the air near the signs of the zodiac. Mr.
-Pitt we are enabled to identify, not only by his
-features, but by his gouty legs. His gun has much
-the longest barrel, and while he fires it off he prudently
-turns away his face, fearing a flash in the pan
-may scorch his eyebrows; or perhaps acting as a
-waterman, looking one way and rowing another. A
-figure behind him discharges a blunderbuss; and in
-the sinister hand of one immediately before him is
-a horse-pistol. The household artillery of all the
-band (and from the smoke which is diffused over the
-centre of the group it appears they are numerous)
-is directed to the same object. One prudent personage,
-a little before Mr. Pitt, seems to be in the
-act of desertion; for though yet seated on the gunpowder
-bench, he has got his head under the rail,
-and is half on the other side. This may be pointed
-at one of that class who go under the denomination
-of Trimmers, or may intimate that the gentleman
-is in the way of getting a place or a peerage; but
-what is his name, or was his future title, I am not
-enough read in the red book<a name="FNanchor_149_149" id="FNanchor_149_149"></a><a href="#Footnote_149_149" class="fnanchor">[149]</a> to determine. The<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_216" id="Page_216">[216]</a></span>
-next figure resembles Henry Bilson Legge. A hand
-with an ear-trumpet may perhaps allude to Lord
-Chesterfield, whose deafness was at this period proverbial.
-Two figures above him are distinguished,
-one by a muff, and the other by a pair of spectacles;
-"to whom related, or by whom begot," baffles my
-conjecture: the lowest figure has a resemblance to
-the first Lord Holland, but <em>he</em> is exhibited on the
-platform. A dog immediately behind Lord Bute,
-having his eye fixed on the urn of Aquarius, I suppose
-to be barking at the shower which pours on the
-laurel inscribed "Culloden." He is a Caledonian
-cur, and on his collar is written the word "Mercy,"
-allusive, perhaps, to the cruelties said to have been
-exercised in Scotland in 1745, which accounts for
-the natives of that country thinking the Duke had
-more liberal rewards and more distinguished honours
-than he fairly merited.</p>
-
-<p>Thus much must suffice for the dignified personages
-who then drove the state machine: to regret that I
-cannot point out more of the characters would be
-useless. I am not deeply studied in the political
-history of that day; to those who are, must be delegated
-the task of more particular explanation.</p>
-
-<p>The two most distinguished persons in the opposite
-group are exalted to the pillory. Over a figure of
-Fanny the Phantom, who is dressed in a white sheet,
-the engraver has written "Conspiracy." In one hand<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_217" id="Page_217">[217]</a></span>
-she holds a small hammer, and in the other a lighted
-taper, with which she sets fire to a <cite>North Briton</cite> that
-is fastened on the breast of Esquire Wilkes, above
-whose head is written "Defamation." The patriot is
-depicted with a most rueful countenance and empty
-pockets. On the steps below are such a company as
-we generally see assembled on these great occasions.
-Two Highlanders, one of whom is grasping a purse,
-and with most significant grin pointing to the <em>profane
-cheeld</em> who had dared to abuse his clan, and
-reprinted Howell's <cite>Description of Scotland</cite>:<a name="FNanchor_150_150" id="FNanchor_150_150"></a><a href="#Footnote_150_150" class="fnanchor">[150]</a> by his
-belt and lapels he appears to be military, and is perhaps
-meant for Colonel Martin. Close to him is a
-Liliputian chimney-sweeper, and a fellow blowing a
-cow's horn with force that gives a Boreas-like distension
-to his cheeks.<a name="FNanchor_151_151" id="FNanchor_151_151"></a><a href="#Footnote_151_151" class="fnanchor">[151]</a> This resounding clangour is
-softened by the cheering notes of the sweet-sounding
-violin, while the growling bagpipe gives a thorough
-bass to the whole. Still further to keep up the spirits
-of the company, a woman is retailing gin from a keg
-inscribed with the two initials "J. W.," and a schoolboy
-amusing himself, <i lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">à la Teniers</i>, with Mr. Wilkes'
-shoes. To complete his degradation, the Bishop's
-Abigail so skilfully trundles her well-soaked mop,
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_218" id="Page_218">[218]</a></span>that he enjoys the full benefit of her mud-coloured
-drops.</p>
-
-<p>The group behind is partly made up of British
-sailors and soldiers, each of whom exhibit a most
-melancholy spectacle of the fortune of war. One
-lion-hearted veteran, having had both legs and arms
-lopped off in the service of his country, has his oak-like
-trunk borne to the borders of the platform upon
-a porter's knot,<a name="FNanchor_152_152" id="FNanchor_152_152"></a><a href="#Footnote_152_152" class="fnanchor">[152]</a> where, with three other disabled warriors,
-he waits in the hope of catching a few drops
-from the fountain of honour; but alas! the stream
-which ascends from a fire-plug behind the gate falls
-on the heads of a mob who are in the background.
-Some of these may possibly be cripples, for a crutch
-as well as several bludgeons is flourished in the air.
-At a window, over which is painted "Dr. Cant's," and
-"Man Midwife," a bishop is confirming two adults by
-the imposition of hands. Whether by this representation
-the artist intended to hint that this father of
-the church confirmed them in their political errors,
-the reader must determine according to his political
-creed; but thus far we may venture to decide, Doctor
-Thomas Seeker, then Archbishop of Canterbury, was
-the person intended to be delineated. At the rooms
-where the Society for Encouragement of Arts, Manufactures,
-and Commerce then met, a number of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_219" id="Page_219">[219]</a></span>
-persons, by the help of a crane, are dragging up a
-large silver palette, on which is written "Premium."
-The man instructing the workmen is, I believe,
-intended for Mr. Peter Templeman, then Secretary to
-the Society; as one of the figures in the first floor is
-probably Lord Romney, then their President.</p>
-
-<p>Behind this we discover the New Church in the
-Strand; and on the opposite side a triumphal column;
-a structure with the word "Hospital" inscribed on the
-front, and a scaffolding, with workmen completing
-a very large new building. These, I apprehend,
-Hogarth intended as descriptive of the great things
-which were to be undertaken and carried on during
-the reign of a monarch who gloried in the name
-of Briton. That the workmen and scaffolding bear
-allusion to those extensive and ponderous premises
-now known by the name of Somerset Place, there can
-be little doubt: the artist, with an eye of prophetic
-anticipation, has placed his scaffolding nearly on the
-spot where the building now stands;<a name="FNanchor_153_153" id="FNanchor_153_153"></a><a href="#Footnote_153_153" class="fnanchor">[153]</a> and conscious
-of the time it must take to pile up such a quantity of
-stone, has not represented it built, but building.</p>
-
-<p>The figure of Lord Bute is a strong likeness, and
-in the turn of head very similar to Ramsay's portrait
-which Mr. Ryland engraved. Pointing out the first<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_220" id="Page_220">[220]</a></span>
-Lord Holland by making the outline of his cap in
-the form of a fox's head, is a whimsical idea. Even
-the sculptured lion's shaggy front has strong markings.
-He is by no means pleased with the distribution of
-those honours that he is made a party in bestowing,
-but goes through his business with a very wry face.
-To the poor maimed sailors and soldiers, Callot could
-not have given much more spirit. Though upon so
-small a scale, they have all the hardihood of their
-order; and both in them and the elevated party<a name="FNanchor_154_154" id="FNanchor_154_154"></a><a href="#Footnote_154_154" class="fnanchor">[154]</a> on
-the opposite side, variety and distinction of character
-is accurately and nicely discriminated.</p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_221" id="Page_221">[221]</a></span></p>
-
-<h3>JOHN WILKES, <span class="smcap">Esq.</span></h3>
-
-<p class="negin2 fs90"><em>Drawn from the Life, and etched in aquafortis, by William
-Hogarth. Published according to Act of Parliament,
-May 16, 1763.</em></p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container"><div class="poetry">
-<p class="verseq">"Enough of Patriots,&mdash;all I ask of man</p>
-<p class="verse">Is only to be honest as he can.</p>
-<p class="verse">Some have deceiv'd, and some may still deceive,</p>
-<p class="verse">'Tis the fool's curse at random to believe.</p>
-<p class="verse">Would those who, by opinion plac'd on high,</p>
-<p class="verse">Stand fair and perfect in their country's eye,</p>
-<p class="verse">Maintain that honour,&mdash;let me in their ear</p>
-<p class="verse">Hint this essential doctrine&mdash;<span class="fs80">PERSEVERE</span>."</p>
-<p class="verse16">&mdash;<span class="smcap">Churchill.</span></p>
-</div></div>
-
-<p class="p2" />
-<div class="figcenter">
-<a name="JW" id="JW"></a>
-<img src="images/i_222fp.jpg" width="500" alt="" />
-<div class="caption">JOHN WILKES ESQ<sup>R</sup>.</div>
-</div>
-
-<div>
-<img class="drop-cap" src="images/dc_221.jpg" alt="" />
-</div>
-
-<p class="drop-capx">The bitter satire upon Hogarth's domestic
-habits, talents, taste, originality, and orthography,
-which has been before noticed,
-would have discomposed a less irritable man, and
-warranted any retaliation in the power of the pencil;
-but he seems to have felt little uneasiness, and under
-a conviction that the overcharged blunderbuss which
-had been aimed at him had burst in the explosion
-and wounded his assailant more than himself, did not
-think it necessary to point fire-arms at an adversary
-whose intemperate zeal had defeated his avowed purpose.
-Under the influence of these impressions, the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_222" id="Page_222">[222]</a></span>
-artist has not attempted to be severe; nor can I comprehend
-upon what ground this plate has been denominated
-a satire, for it is not a caricature, but a very
-accurate and striking resemblance, with the identical
-accompaniments which I most firmly believe Mr.
-Wilkes would at that time have chosen as the decorations
-of his portrait. The cap of liberty, "Heaven-descended,
-godlike liberty," above his head, and two
-political papers which he acknowledged himself to
-have written, on his right hand. One of these papers
-is marked with that memorable number, which was
-in its day a kind of shibboleth to the party.<a name="FNanchor_156_156" id="FNanchor_156_156"></a><a href="#Footnote_156_156" class="fnanchor">[156]</a> On the
-same table with the two <cite>North Britons</cite> is a pen and
-ink, importing that the person delineated is an author,
-a character the Colonel could hardly be ashamed of.
-These premises granted to the artist,&mdash;and</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container"><div class="poetry">
-<p class="verseq">"The very head and front of his offending</p>
-<p class="verse">Hath this extent, no more,"&mdash;</p>
-</div></div>
-
-<p class="noindent">what crime has he committed? He has given an
-engraving, which cannot indeed be considered as a
-compliment, because it is not a flattering likeness; but
-I do not see why it should have been received as a
-sarcasm. If we add to this the time when, and place
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_223" id="Page_223">[223]</a></span>where, it was taken; if we consider how glorious the
-situation!&mdash;how interesting the moment!&mdash;it is delineating
-a general at the instant of victory; and so
-far from bearing any marks of satire, that it might be
-almost mistaken for a panegyric. To say the truth,
-though his friend Churchill has thrown the picture
-into shadow, and given only the dark tints, Mr.
-Wilkes seemed willing enough to receive it as such;<a name="FNanchor_157_157" id="FNanchor_157_157"></a><a href="#Footnote_157_157" class="fnanchor">[157]</a>
-and I am informed, frequently told his friends that
-he every day grew into a stronger resemblance. The
-pleasant and philosophic indifference with which he
-spoke of it at the time, did honour to his good humour
-and his good sense. He declared himself very little
-concerned about the case of his soul, as he was only
-tenant for life, and that the best apology for his person
-was, that he did not make himself.<a name="FNanchor_158_158" id="FNanchor_158_158"></a><a href="#Footnote_158_158" class="fnanchor">[158]</a></p>
-
-<p>Such was the style of Mr. Wilkes. As to Mr.
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_224" id="Page_224">[224]</a></span>Churchill, his temper must have forsaken him; and
-every circumstance taken into the account, when describing
-this transaction, he seems to have forgotten
-that satire ought to be at least seasoned with truth.
-Brilliant diction, animated verse, and high-sounding
-words, are very apt to impose. Churchill's is a muse
-of fire, and dazzles the eye like the sun in its meridian
-splendour; it fascinates the mind, and carries the most
-sober reason into the airy regions of imagination.
-This considered, before I insert his bitter satire, it
-will be but fair to give a candid and dispassionate
-relation of that which provoked it.</p>
-
-<p>When Mr. Wilkes was the second time brought
-from the Tower to Westminster Hall, and had in one
-day an honourable acquittal, an universal acclamation,
-and a proud triumph, Mr. Hogarth attended in the
-court of Common Pleas, and, as was his constant custom,
-carried a port-crayon in his pocket. Surrounded
-by a crowd of spectators, who came to see how the
-cause would terminate, he took a portrait of Mr.
-Wilkes: delineated a patriot at the moment when he
-was in his own person asserting the cause of liberty, and
-by his own trial ascertaining the law of his country.
-But, replies an advocate for Mr. Wilkes, "Hogarth<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_225" id="Page_225">[225]</a></span>
-certainly intended to make a caricature."<a name="FNanchor_159_159" id="FNanchor_159_159"></a><a href="#Footnote_159_159" class="fnanchor">[159]</a> To this
-I have no other answer than pointing to the print,
-which, being compared with the original, will prove
-to every dispassionate inquirer what it is my wish to
-establish, <em>i.e.</em> that it has been mistaken for a caricature,
-from the world knowing the provocation which
-Hogarth had previously received, and which every
-man felt would have justified the most severe retaliation.</p>
-
-<p>What! Consider it as a satire to hand down to
-posterity a patriot at the moment of inspiration!
-"While every breast caught the holy flame of liberty,
-and all his fellow-citizens were animated in his cause,
-for they knew it to be their own cause, that of their
-country, and of its laws. It was declared to be so
-a few hours afterwards by the unanimous sentence
-of the Judges of that Court; and they were all present."</p>
-
-<p>From the style in which the bard relates this transaction,
-a plain reader would be tempted to think
-that Hogarth had stolen into Westminster Hall with
-a quiver full of poisoned arrows hung to his girdle,
-and, like a murderous ruffian, hid himself behind the
-arras, that he might seize the first opportunity of
-assassinating this paragon of patriotism.</p>
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_226" id="Page_226">[226]</a></span></p>
-<div class="poetry-container"><div class="poetry">
-<p class="verse4">"When Wilkes, our countryman, our common friend,</p>
-<p class="verse">Arose, his king, his country to defend;</p>
-<p class="verse">When tools of power he bar'd to public view,</p>
-<p class="verse">And from their holes the sneaking cowards drew;</p>
-<p class="verse">When Rancour found it far beyond her reach,</p>
-<p class="verse">To soil his honour, and his truth impeach,&mdash;</p>
-<p class="verse">What could induce thee, at a time and place</p>
-<p class="verse">Where manly foes had blush'd to show their face,</p>
-<p class="verse">To make that effort which must damn thy name,</p>
-<p class="verse">And sink thee deep, deep in the grave with shame!</p>
-<p class="verse">Did Virtue move thee? no, 'twas pride, rank pride,</p>
-<p class="verse">And if thou hadst not done it, thou hadst died.</p>
-<p class="verse">Malice (who, disappointed of her end,</p>
-<p class="verse">Whether to work the bane of foe or friend,</p>
-<p class="verse">Preys on herself, and driven to the stake,</p>
-<p class="verse">Gives virtue that revenge she scorns to take)</p>
-<p class="verse">Had killed thee, tottering on life's utmost verge,</p>
-<p class="verse">Had Wilkes and Liberty escaped thy scourge.</p>
-<p class="verse4">"When that great charter which our fathers bought</p>
-<p class="verse">With their best blood, was into question brought;</p>
-<p class="verse">When big with ruin, o'er each English head,</p>
-<p class="verse">Vile Slavery hung suspended by a thread;</p>
-<p class="verse">When Liberty, all trembling and aghast,</p>
-<p class="verse">Fear'd for the future, knowing what was past;</p>
-<p class="verse">When every breast was chill'd with deep despair,</p>
-<p class="verse">Till reason pointed out that <span class="smcap">Pratt</span> was there.</p>
-<p class="verse">Lurking most ruffian-like behind a screen,</p>
-<p class="verse">So plac'd all things to see, himself unseen,</p>
-<p class="verse">Virtue with due contempt saw<a name="FNanchor_160_160" id="FNanchor_160_160"></a><a href="#Footnote_160_160" class="fnanchor">[160]</a> Hogarth stand,</p>
-<p class="verse">The murderous pencil in his palsied hand.</p>
-<p class="verse">What was the cause of Liberty to him,</p>
-<p class="verse">Or what was Honour! let them sink or swim,</p>
-<p class="verse">So he may gratify without control,</p>
-<p class="verse">The mean resentments of his selfish soul,</p>
-<p class="verse">Let Freedom perish, if, to Freedom true,</p>
-<p class="verse">In the same ruin Wilkes may perish too."</p>
-</div></div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_227" id="Page_227">[227]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>This animated and high-coloured rhapsody, beautiful
-and fervid as it is, when reduced to plain prose,
-ends in Liberty, Virtue, and Honour being all aghast,
-because Hogarth took Mr. Wilkes' portrait without
-the customary fee! But my readers may be weary
-of the subject. Enough&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container"><div class="poetry">
-<p class="verseq">"Enough of Wilkes,&mdash;to good and honest men</p>
-<p class="verse">His actions speak much stronger than my pen."</p>
-<p class="verse16">&mdash;<span class="smcap">Churchill.</span></p>
-</div></div>
-
-<p class="p4" />
-<div class="figcenter">
-<img src="images/end_227.jpg" alt="" />
-</div>
-
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_228" id="Page_228">[228]</a></span></p>
-
-<h3>THE BRUISER, CHARLES CHURCHILL
-(ONCE THE REVEREND),</h3>
-
-<p class="negin2 fs90"><em>In the Character of a Russian Hercules, regaling himself after
-having killed the Monster Caricatura, that so sorely galled
-his virtuous friend, the heaven-born Wilkes.&mdash;Published
-Aug. 1, 1763.</em></p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container"><div class="poetry">
-<p class="verseq">"But he had a club,</p>
-<p class="verse">This dragon to drub,</p>
-<p class="verse">Or he had ne'er don't, I warrant ye."</p>
-<p class="verse12">&mdash;<cite>Dragon of Wantley.</cite></p>
-</div></div>
-
-<p class="p2" />
-<div class="figcenter">
-<a name="CC" id="CC"></a>
-<img src="images/i_228fp.jpg" width="500" alt="" />
-<div class="caption">THE REV. C. CHURCHILL.</div>
-</div>
-
-<div>
-<img class="drop-cap" src="images/dc_228.jpg" alt="" />
-</div>
-
-<p class="drop-capx">Enraged by the publication of Mr. Wilkes'
-portrait, Mr. Charles Churchill drew his
-gray goose quill, and wrote a most virulent
-and vindictive satire, which he entitled <cite>An Epistle to
-William Hogarth</cite>. The painter might be a very
-good Christian, but he was not blest with that meek
-forbearance which induces those who are smote on
-one cheek to turn the other also. He was an old
-man, but did not wish to be considered as that feeble,
-superannuated, helpless animal which the poet had
-described. He scarcely wished to live</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container"><div class="poetry">
-<p class="verseq">"After his flame lack'd oil, to be the snuff</p>
-<p class="verse">Of younger spirits."</p>
-</div></div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_229" id="Page_229">[229]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Apprehensive that the public might construe his
-delaying a reply to proceed from inability, he did not
-wait the tedious process of a new plate, but took a
-piece of copper on which he had, in the year 1749,
-engraven a portrait of himself and dog, erased his
-own head, and in the place of it introduced the divine
-with a tattered band and torn ruffles,&mdash;"No Lord's
-anointed, but a Russian bear."</p>
-
-<p>In this I must acknowledge there was more ill-nature
-than wit.<a name="FNanchor_161_161" id="FNanchor_161_161"></a><a href="#Footnote_161_161" class="fnanchor">[161]</a> It is rather caricature than character,
-and more like the coarse mangling of Tom
-Browne than the delicate yet wounding satire of
-Alexander Pope. For this rough retort he might,
-however, plead the poet's precedent. His opponent
-had brandished a tomahawk; and Hogarth, old as
-he was, wielded a battle-axe in his own defence. A
-more aggravated provocation cannot well be conceived.
-The attack was unmerciful, unmanly, unjust.
-Let the following extracts speak for themselves:&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container"><div class="poetry">
-<p class="verseq">"Amongst the sons of men, how few are known</p>
-<p class="verse">Who dare be just to merit not their own!</p>
-<p class="verse">Superior virtue and superior sense,</p>
-<p class="verse">To knaves and fools will always give offence:</p>
-<p class="verse">Nay, men of real worth can scarcely bear&mdash;</p>
-<p class="verse">So nice is jealousy&mdash;a rival there."</p>
-</div></div>
-
-<p>Such is the introduction to Churchill's Epistle, and I<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_230" id="Page_230">[230]</a></span>
-believe the reader will grant that it is quite as applicable
-to the poet as the painter. After some lines
-which would apply to any other subject as well as
-that under consideration, he thus proceeds:</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container"><div class="poetry">
-<p class="verseq">"Hogarth,&mdash;I take thee, Candour, at thy word,</p>
-<p class="verse">Accept thy proffer'd terms, and will be heard;</p>
-<p class="verse">Thee have I heard with virulence declaim,</p>
-<p class="verse">Nothing retained of Candour but the name;</p>
-<p class="verse">By thee have I been charg'd in angry strains,<a name="FNanchor_162_162" id="FNanchor_162_162"></a><a href="#Footnote_162_162" class="fnanchor">[162]</a></p>
-<p class="verse">With that mean falsehood which my soul disdains."</p>
-</div></div>
-
-<p>How furious the onset! but if the lines are brought
-back to plain prose, they will run thus: "Hogarth,
-thy word is candour. I adopt the same word, and
-having heard <em>thee</em> declaim with a virulence that retained
-nothing of candour but the name, thou shalt
-hear me declaim in the same style."</p>
-
-<p>That this is the precise meaning which the poet
-intended, I will not presume to assert; but that he
-has pursued his theme in a manner that amply
-justifies my supposition, the following lines will
-abundantly prove:&mdash;</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_231" id="Page_231">[231]</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container"><div class="poetry">
-<p class="verseq">"Hogarth, stand forth,&mdash;nay, hang not thus aloof,</p>
-<p class="verse">Now Candour, now thou shalt receive such proof,</p>
-<p class="verse">Such damning proof, that henceforth thou shalt fear</p>
-<p class="verse">To tax my wrath, and own my conduct clear.</p>
-<p class="verse">Hogarth, stand forth,&mdash;I dare thee to be try'd</p>
-<p class="verse">In that great court where Conscience must preside:</p>
-<p class="verse">At that most solemn bar hold up thy hand;</p>
-<p class="verse">Think before whom, on what account you stand.</p>
-<p class="verse">Speak, but consider well&mdash;from first to last</p>
-<p class="verse">Review thy life, view every action past:</p>
-<p class="verse">Nay, you shall have no reason to complain,&mdash;</p>
-<p class="verse">Take longer time, and view them o'er again:</p>
-<p class="verse">Canst thou remember from thy earliest youth,&mdash;</p>
-<p class="verse">And as thy God must judge thee, speak the truth,&mdash;</p>
-<p class="verse">A single instance where, self laid aside,</p>
-<p class="verse">And justice taking place of fear and pride,</p>
-<p class="verse">Thou with an equal eye didst genius view,</p>
-<p class="verse">And give to merit what was merit's due?</p>
-<p class="verse">Genius and merit are a sure offence,</p>
-<p class="verse">And thy soul sickens at the name of sense."</p>
-</div></div>
-
-<p>If Hogarth had so marked an aversion to all genius,
-merit, and sense, it is rather singular that he should
-have lived on such intimate terms with Mr. Churchill
-and Mr. Wilkes.</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container"><div class="poetry">
-<p class="verseq">"Is any one so foolish to succeed?</p>
-<p class="verse">On Envy's altar he is doomed to bleed.</p>
-<p class="verse">Hogarth, a guilty pleasure in his eyes,</p>
-<p class="verse">The place of executioner supplies:</p>
-<p class="verse">See how he gloats, enjoys the sacred feast,</p>
-<p class="verse">And proves himself by cruelty a priest."</p>
-</div></div>
-
-<p>What does the bard prove himself?</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container"><div class="poetry">
-<p class="verseq">"Whilst the weak artist to thy whims a slave,</p>
-<p class="verse">Would bury all those powers which nature gave,</p>
-<p class="verse">Would suffer blank concealment to obscure</p>
-<p class="verse">Those rays that jealousy could not endure;</p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_232" id="Page_232">[232]</a></span>
-<p class="verse">To feed thy vanity would rust unknown,</p>
-<p class="verse">And to secure thy credit, blast his own:</p>
-<p class="verse">In Hogarth he was sure to find a friend;</p>
-<p class="verse">He could not fear, and therefore might commend.</p>
-<p class="verse">But when his spirit, rous'd by honest shame,</p>
-<p class="verse">Shook off that lethargy, and soar'd to fame;</p>
-<p class="verse">When with the pride of man resolv'd and strong,</p>
-<p class="verse">He scorn'd those fears which did his honour wrong;</p>
-<p class="verse">And on himself determin'd to rely,</p>
-<p class="verse">Brought forth his labours to the public eye,</p>
-<p class="verse">No friend in thee could such a rebel know,</p>
-<p class="verse">He had desert, and Hogarth was his foe."</p>
-</div></div>
-
-<p>He must be a very weak artist indeed who would
-bury the talents which Nature gave, to gratify the
-whims of another man; but admitting a painter had
-been found "who suffered blank concealment to obscure
-those rays which jealousy could not endure,"
-I cannot comprehend how it concerned Hogarth.
-His walk was all his own: even now he need not
-dread a rival there. Mr. Churchill acknowledges that
-in walks of humour</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container"><div class="poetry">
-<p class="verseq">"Hogarth unrivall'd stands, and shall engage</p>
-<p class="verse">Unrivall'd praise to the most distant age!"</p>
-</div></div>
-
-<p>Being unrivalled, I do not see why he should dread
-a rival; nor can I conceive he could be jealous of
-talents which he must be conscious were inferior to
-his own.</p>
-
-<p>After some very harsh lines on envy, in no degree
-applicable to Hogarth, and the rhapsody about
-Wilkes and Liberty, which I have noticed in the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_233" id="Page_233">[233]</a></span>
-preceding plate, this high priest of the Temple of
-Cruelty, rejoicing in his strength and triumphing in
-the pride of his youth, without any reverence for gray
-hairs or respect for superior talents, sets up the war-whoop,
-and springs upon a feeble old man with the
-ferocity of a hungry cannibal:</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container"><div class="poetry">
-<p class="verseq">"With all the symptoms of assur'd decay,</p>
-<p class="verse">With age and sickness pinch'd and worn away,</p>
-<p class="verse">Pale quivering lips, lank cheeks, and faltering tongue,</p>
-<p class="verse">The spirits out of tune, the nerves unstrung,</p>
-<p class="verse">The body shrivell'd up, the dim eyes sunk</p>
-<p class="verse">Within their sockets deep; the weak hams shrunk,</p>
-<p class="verse">The body's weight unable to sustain,</p>
-<p class="verse">The stream of life scarce trembling through the vein:</p>
-<p class="verse">More than half kill'd by honest truths which fell,</p>
-<p class="verse">Through thy own fault, from men who wish'd thee well;</p>
-<p class="verse">Canst thou e'en thus thy thoughts to vengeance give,</p>
-<p class="verse">And dead to all things else, to malice live?</p>
-<p class="verse">Hence, dotard, to thy closet; shut thee in,</p>
-<p class="verse">By deep repentance wash away thy sin;</p>
-<p class="verse">From haunts of men, to shame and sorrow fly,</p>
-<p class="verse">And on the verge of death learn how to die."</p>
-</div></div>
-
-<p>That a man in the vigour of life&mdash;for Churchill
-was not much more than thirty years old&mdash;should
-draw so pitiable a picture of age and decrepitude, and
-then attack that age and decrepitude with a barbarity
-so savage, is horrible! But the baleful spirit of party
-overthrows the barriers of truth, eradicates philanthropy,
-and severs those social, I had almost said
-sacred, bonds which ought to unite and attach men
-of genius to each other. Had Churchill felt his own<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_234" id="Page_234">[234]</a></span>
-beautiful apostrophe, he would have blotted the lines
-with his tears:</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container"><div class="poetry">
-<p class="verseq">"Ah! let not youth to insolence allied,</p>
-<p class="verse">In heat of blood, in full career of pride,</p>
-<p class="verse">Possessed of genius, with unhallowed rage,</p>
-<p class="verse">Mock the infirmities of reverend age.</p>
-<p class="verse">The greatest genius to this fate may bow."</p>
-<p class="verse12">&mdash;<cite>Churchill's Epistle to Hogarth.</cite></p>
-</div></div>
-
-<p>After advising the painter to learn how to die, the
-bard proceeds; repeats and amplifies what he had
-before written on Hogarth's envy, gives a metrical
-version of that <cite>North Briton</cite> which ridicules the
-artist's love of flattery, and beautifully versifies Mr.
-Wilkes' prosaic abuse of poor "Sigismunda."</p>
-
-<p>In the lines which follow, he first throws the gauntlet,
-and then draws such a picture of the man he has
-challenged as must have subdued the rancour of an
-assassin; so far from being a stimulus to revenge, it
-excites pity, and concludes in the form of an apology:</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container"><div class="poetry">
-<p class="verseq">"For me, who, warm and zealous for my friend,</p>
-<p class="verse">In spite of railing thousands, will commend;</p>
-<p class="verse">And no less warm and zealous 'gainst my foes,</p>
-<p class="verse">Spite of commending thousands will oppose;</p>
-<p class="verse">I dare thy worst, with scorn behold thy rage,</p>
-<p class="verse">But with an eye of pity view thy age;</p>
-<p class="verse">Thy feeble age, in which as in a glass</p>
-<p class="verse">We see how men to dissolution pass.</p>
-<p class="verse">Thou wretched being, whom on reason's plan,</p>
-<p class="verse">So chang'd, so lost, I cannot call a man,</p>
-<p class="verse">What could persuade thee at this time of life</p>
-<p class="verse">To launch afresh into this sea of strife?</p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_235" id="Page_235">[235]</a></span>
-<p class="verse">Better for thee, scarce crawling on the earth,</p>
-<p class="verse">Almost as much a child as at thy birth,</p>
-<p class="verse">To have resign'd in peace thy parting breath,</p>
-<p class="verse">And sunk unnotic'd in the arms of death.</p>
-<p class="verse">Why would thy gray, gray hairs resentment brave,</p>
-<p class="verse">Thus to go down with sorrow to the grave?</p>
-<p class="verse">Now by my soul it makes me blush to know</p>
-<p class="verse">My spirits could descend to such a foe.</p>
-<p class="verse">Whatever cause thy vengeance might provoke,</p>
-<p class="verse">It seems rank cowardice to give the stroke."</p>
-</div></div>
-
-<p>Seems, Churchill!&mdash;nay, it is!</p>
-
-<p>The following address to the artist may, with
-infinitely more propriety, be applied to the bard;
-whose name I have therefore ventured to insert in the
-place where he has left the name of Hogarth:</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container"><div class="poetry">
-<p class="verseq">"With so much merit, and so much success,</p>
-<p class="verse">With so much power to curse, so much to bless,</p>
-<p class="verse">Would he have been man's friend instead of foe,</p>
-<p class="verse">Churchill had been a little god below.</p>
-<p class="verse">Why, then, like savage giants fam'd of old,</p>
-<p class="verse">Of whom in Scripture story we are told,</p>
-<p class="verse">Dost thou in cruelty that strength employ,</p>
-<p class="verse">Which Nature meant to save, not to destroy?</p>
-<p class="verse">Why dost thou, all in horrid pomp array'd,</p>
-<p class="verse">Sit grinning o'er the ruins thou hast made?</p>
-<p class="verse">Most rank ill-nature must applaud thy art,</p>
-<p class="verse">But even Candour must condemn thy heart."</p>
-<p class="verse16">&mdash;<cite>Epistle to Hogarth.</cite></p>
-</div></div>
-
-<p>The whole of this unfeeling composition is dictated
-by the same spirit, and written in much the same
-style, as the lines I have quoted; it reflects more
-dishonour on the satirist than on the subject of his
-abuse.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_236" id="Page_236">[236]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>To enumerate further examples would be painful
-as well as tedious: the <em>graven image</em> must be attended
-to.</p>
-
-<p>It represents Mr. Churchill in the character of a
-bear hugging a foaming tankard of porter,<a name="FNanchor_163_163" id="FNanchor_163_163"></a><a href="#Footnote_163_163" class="fnanchor">[163]</a> and like
-another Hercules, armed with a knotted club, to
-attack hydras, destroy dragons, and discomfit giants!</p>
-
-<p>From the two letters "N. B." inscribed on the club,
-it appears that the painter considered Churchill as a
-writer in the <cite>North Briton</cite>; and from the words "infamous
-fallacy, Lie the 1st, 2d, 3d, 4th," etc., on each
-of the knots, that he also considered him as a poet
-who did not pay the strictest regard to truth.</p>
-
-<p>To designate more positively the object of his ridicule,
-and render this rude representative still more
-ludicrous, it is decorated with a band and a pair of
-ruffles; and with these characteristic ornaments,
-though it remains a good bear, it becomes a sort of
-overcharged portrait of the reverend satirist, and I
-really think resembles him.</p>
-
-<p>Hogarth's favourite dog Trump, who had been his
-companion in the portrait from which this is altered,
-retains his original situation on the outside of the picture
-frame, but is now contemptuously treating and
-trampling upon the Epistle to his master. Near him<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_237" id="Page_237">[237]</a></span>
-lie two books, on one of which is written, "<cite>A New
-Way to Pay Old Debts</cite>, a comedy, by Massinger:"
-on the other, "<em>A List of Subscribers to the North
-Briton</em>." To intimate the poverty of those who
-wrote it, the pyramid is crowned by a begging-box;
-and beneath, as emblems of art, lie a pencil and
-palette.</p>
-
-<p>In this state the print was published; but the
-gentleman whom it offended asserting that it proved
-the painter in his dotage, he refuted their calumny
-by the following spirited addition:&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>In the form of a framed picture on the painter's
-palette, is placed a small drawing, which may serve
-as a sort of political postscript to his first plate of
-"The Times," or a kind of prelude to the second. It
-represents Mr. Pitt reclining in a similar position to
-that of Sir Isaac Newton in Westminster Abbey, and
-is probably meant as allusive to his having retired
-from public business, to enjoy the <i lang="la" xml:lang="la">otium cum dignitate</i>,
-a short time before. The background is composed of
-a pyramidical piece of marble, from the top of which
-is suspended a millstone, inscribed "£3000," in allusion
-to his saying that "Hanover was a millstone
-round the neck of England," and afterwards increasing
-the public burdens by accepting a pension of
-£3000 a year. It is suspended by a thread, and
-must, if it falls, dash him to pieces. This was
-Hogarth's idea of crushing popularity. To heighten<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_238" id="Page_238">[238]</a></span>
-the ridicule, though recumbent, he is firing a mortar
-at the symbol of peace, "a dove with an olive branch"
-perched on the standard of England; but his artillery
-is not powerful enough to reach the mark; the powder
-fails in its effect, the ball falls short of its object. In
-most of his measures Mr. Pitt was supported by the
-city of London, and to this our great metropolis
-Hogarth appears to allude, in making the two Guildhall
-giants, with each of them a pipe of tobacco in
-his mouth, supporters of the Monument. The tubes
-with Indian weed evidently hint at his great Creolian
-friend, Mr. Alderman Beckford. To denote that Mr.
-Pitt was the sovereign of their affections, and kept
-the master-key of their iron chests, one of these representatives
-of the city is giving him supreme rule, by
-placing upon his head "the likeness of a kingly
-crown." The other holds a shield, on which is emblazoned
-the arms of Austria, which the statesman
-indignantly spurns. At an opposite corner, the
-painter has exhibited himself, in the humble character
-of a showman, drilling Messrs. Churchill and
-Wilkes through the varying steps of a political
-minuet. The first he has represented under the type
-of a bear in a laced hat, and the last as a monkey
-astride upon a mop-stick, with the cap of liberty at
-the top of it. In his left hand he holds a check-string,
-which being fastened to his two pupils, answers
-the purpose of a bridle, and in his right brandishes a<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_239" id="Page_239">[239]</a></span>
-cat-o'-nine-tails. That the two quadrupeds may
-dance to some tune, a figure without features, intended
-as a second delineation of Earl Temple, is
-playing on the fiddle.<a name="FNanchor_164_164" id="FNanchor_164_164"></a><a href="#Footnote_164_164" class="fnanchor">[164]</a></p>
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_240" id="Page_240">[240]</a></span></p>
-<p>Such is Hogarth's representation; and in the poem
-of <cite>Independence</cite>, which Churchill <ins class="corr" title="Transcriber's Note&mdash;Original text: 'published in Septemper'">published in September</ins>
-1764, he admirably parries the caricature by
-a most spirited description of himself. In this he
-has evidently taken Hogarth's print for his model.
-Having described a lean, long, lank, and bony figure,
-designed for a then unpopular nobleman, he thus
-proceeds:</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container"><div class="poetry">
-<p class="verseq">"Such was the first. The second was a man</p>
-<p class="verse">Whom Nature built on a quite different plan:</p>
-<p class="verse">A bear, whom from the moment he was born,</p>
-<p class="verse">His dam despis'd, and left unlick'd in scorn:</p>
-<p class="verse">A Babel, which, the power of art outdone,</p>
-<p class="verse">She could not finish when she had begun:</p>
-<p class="verse">An utter chaos, out of which no might</p>
-<p class="verse">But that of God could strike one spark of light.</p>
-<p class="verse">Broad were his shoulders, and from blade to blade</p>
-<p class="verse">A H&mdash;&mdash; might at full length have laid.</p>
-<p class="verse">Vast were his bones; his muscles twisted strong;</p>
-<p class="verse">His face was short, but broader than 'twas long.</p>
-<p class="verse">His features, though by nature they were large,</p>
-<p class="verse">Contentment had contrived to overcharge,</p>
-<p class="verse">And bury meaning; save that we might spy</p>
-<p class="verse">Sense low'ring on the pent-house of his eye,<a name="FNanchor_165_165" id="FNanchor_165_165"></a><a href="#Footnote_165_165" class="fnanchor">[165]</a></p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_241" id="Page_241">[241]</a></span>
-<p class="verse">His arms were two twin oaks; his legs so stout,</p>
-<p class="verse">That they might bear a mansion-house about.</p>
-<p class="verse">Nor were they,&mdash;look but at his body there,</p>
-<p class="verse">Design'd by fate a much less weight to bear.</p>
-<p class="verse4">"O'er a brown cassock, which had once been black,</p>
-<p class="verse">Which hung in tatters on his brawny back,</p>
-<p class="verse">A sight most strange and awkward to behold,</p>
-<p class="verse">He threw a covering of blue and gold.</p>
-<p class="verse4">"Just at that time of life when man by rule</p>
-<p class="verse">The fop laid down, takes up the graver fool,</p>
-<p class="verse">He started up a fop, and fond of show,</p>
-<p class="verse">Look'd like another Hercules turn'd beau;</p>
-<p class="verse">A subject met with only now and then,</p>
-<p class="verse">Much fitter for the pencil than the pen.</p>
-<p class="verse">Hogarth would draw him, Envy must allow,</p>
-<p class="verse">Ev'n to the life,&mdash;were Hogarth living now."<a name="FNanchor_166_166" id="FNanchor_166_166"></a><a href="#Footnote_166_166" class="fnanchor">[166]</a></p>
-</div></div>
-
-<p>In the following letter written to his friend Mr.
-Wilkes, and dated August 3, 1763, Churchill considers
-Hogarth as already dead:&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>"I take it for granted you have seen Hogarth's
-print against me. Was ever anything so contemptible?
-I think he is fairly <i lang="la" xml:lang="la">felo de se</i>. I think not to<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_242" id="Page_242">[242]</a></span>
-let him off in that manner, although I might safely leave
-him to your notes.<a name="FNanchor_167_167" id="FNanchor_167_167"></a><a href="#Footnote_167_167" class="fnanchor">[167]</a> He has broken into my pale of
-private life, and set that example of illiberality which
-I wished; of that kind of attack which is ungenerous
-in the first instance, but justice in return.<a name="FNanchor_168_168" id="FNanchor_168_168"></a><a href="#Footnote_168_168" class="fnanchor">[168]</a> I intend
-an elegy on him, supposing him dead; but *&mdash;&mdash;
-*&mdash;&mdash; tells me, with a kiss, he will be really dead
-before it comes out; that I have already killed him,
-etc. How sweet is flattery from the woman we love!<a name="FNanchor_169_169" id="FNanchor_169_169"></a><a href="#Footnote_169_169" class="fnanchor">[169]</a>
-and how weak is our boasted strength, when opposed
-to beauty and good sense with good-nature."</p></div>
-
-<p>Mr. Churchill died at Boulogne in his thirty-second
-year, and was in November 1764 buried at Dover:
-at which place, on a small stone in the old churchyard,
-formerly belonging to the collegiate Church of
-St. Martin, is the following inscription:</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container"><div class="poetry">
-<p class="verse">"Life to the last enjoy'd, here Churchill lies."</p>
-</div></div>
-
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_243" id="Page_243">[243]</a></span></p>
-
-<h2><span class="lsp">APPENDIX</span>,</h2>
-
-<p class="pfs80">CONSISTING OF</p>
-
-<p class="p1 pfs100">ENGRAVED HEADPIECES FOR RECEIPTS, ETC.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<img src="images/sep.jpg" width="60" alt="" />
-</div>
-
-<div>
-<img class="drop-cap" src="images/dc_243.jpg" alt="" />
-</div>
-
-<p class="drop-capx">At the time that Hogarth lived, we were not
-compelled to have our receipts sanctioned
-with a royal stamp; but upon the receipts
-given by Hogarth, there was "the stamp of genius,
-the broad seal of nature!" Whoever paid a subscription
-had a written acknowledgment beneath a little
-print. This invariably abounded in wit, but had
-seldom any immediate allusion to the series with
-which it was presented.<a name="FNanchor_170_170" id="FNanchor_170_170"></a><a href="#Footnote_170_170" class="fnanchor">[170]</a> His great works I consider
-as giving not only a general mirror of the human
-mind, but a history of the local and temporary customs
-of the day when they were published. I have
-therefore arranged them in the order they were
-engraved; and thinking that the receipts, or less
-important prints, would break the chain by which
-they are in a degree connected, I have reserved the
-following short memoranda for an appendix:&mdash;</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_244" id="Page_244">[244]</a></span></p>
-
-<h3>BOYS PEEPING AT NATURE.<a name="FNanchor_171_171" id="FNanchor_171_171"></a>
- <a href="#Footnote_171_171" class="fnanchor"><span class="xs">[171]</span></a></h3>
-
-<p class="pfs80">"Thou, Nature, art my goddess."</p>
-
-<p class="p2" />
-<div class="figcenter">
-<a name="BP" id="BP"></a>
-<img src="images/i_244fp.jpg" width="400" alt="" />
-<div class="caption">BOYS PEEPING AT NATURE.</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class="noindent">This plate was engraved in 1733, and intended as
-the subscription-ticket to "The Harlot's Progress;"
-but in the original design Nature was habited in
-a petticoat, and the boy who now points to a three-quarters
-portrait was placed before her, and represented
-as curiously stooping down to examine the
-fringe. Some of the artist's friends, suggesting that
-this was too ludicrous an idea for the public, the
-copper was thrown aside.</p>
-
-<p>In the year 1751, Hogarth etched his burlesque
-"Paul," as a receipt-ticket to the large "Paul before
-Felix." In a printed catalogue of his works, dated
-1754, I find "Paul before Felix" marked £0, 7s. 6d.,
-and "Paul before Felix, in the manner of Rembrandt,"
-£0, 0s. 0d. Applications for the gratis etching were
-very frequent; and he found, to his great mortification,
-that the public were more eager to possess his
-little print than either of the large ones. To punish
-their want of taste, he gave away no more, but fixed
-the price at two-thirds of the sum at which he published
-the large print.</p>
-
-<p>This alteration of his first plan left the great
-"Paul" without a ticket. To have given him the
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_245" id="Page_245">[245]</a></span>"Peeping Boys" in their original state, would have
-been a species of sacrilege; they were chastened,
-grouped as they now are, and transferred from the
-"Harlot" to the "Apostle."</p>
-
-<p>Though the circumstance from which it received a
-name was done away, and very little either novel or
-striking remains, he retained the original title of
-"Boys Peeping at Nature."<a name="FNanchor_172_172" id="FNanchor_172_172"></a><a href="#Footnote_172_172" class="fnanchor">[172]</a></p>
-
-
-<p class="p2" />
-<h3>FIVE GROUPS OF HEADS.</h3>
-
-<h4>THE LAUGHING AUDIENCE.</h4>
-
-<div class="poetry-container"><div class="poetry">
-<p class="verseq">"Let him laugh now, who never laugh'd before;</p>
-<p class="verse">And he who always laugh'd, laugh now the more."</p>
-</div></div>
-
-<p class="p2" />
-<div class="figcenter">
-<a name="LA" id="LA"></a>
-<img src="images/i_246fp.jpg" width="600" alt="" />
-<div class="caption">THE LAUGHING AUDIENCE.</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class="noindent">From the first print that Hogarth engraved to the
-last that he published, I do not think there is one in
-which character is more displayed than in this very<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_246" id="Page_246">[246]</a></span>
-spirited little etching. It is much superior to the
-more delicate engravings from his designs by other
-artists, and I prefer it to those that were still higher
-finished by his own burin.</p>
-
-<p>The prim coxcomb with an enormous bag, whose
-favours, like those of Hercules between Virtue and
-Vice, are contended for by two rival orange girls,
-gives an admirable idea of the dress of the day;
-when, if we may judge from this print, our grave
-forefathers, defying nature and despising convenience,
-had a much higher rank in the temple of Folly than
-was then attained by their ladies. It must be acknowledged
-that since that period the softer sex
-have asserted their natural rights; and, snatching
-the wreath of fashion from the brow of presuming
-man, have tortured it into such forms&mdash;that were it
-possible, which certes it is not, to disguise a beauteous
-face!&mdash;But to the high behest of fashion all must
-bow.</p>
-
-<p>Governed by this idol, our beau has a cuff that for a
-modern fop would furnish fronts for a waistcoat, and
-a family fire-screen might be made of his enormous
-bag. His bare and shrivelled neck has a close resemblance
-to that of a half-starved greyhound; and
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_247" id="Page_247">[247]</a></span>his face, figure, and air, form a fine contrast to the
-easy and <i lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">degagée</i> assurance of the grisette whom he
-addresses.</p>
-
-<p>The opposite figure, nearly as grotesque, though
-not quite so formal as <em>its</em> companion, presses <em>its</em> left
-hand upon <em>its</em> breast,<a name="FNanchor_173_173" id="FNanchor_173_173"></a><a href="#Footnote_173_173" class="fnanchor">[173]</a> in the style of protestation,
-and eagerly contemplating the superabundant charms
-of a beauty of Rubens' school, presents her with a
-pinch of comfort.<a name="FNanchor_174_174" id="FNanchor_174_174"></a><a href="#Footnote_174_174" class="fnanchor">[174]</a> Every muscle, every line of his
-countenance, is acted upon by affectation and grimace,
-and his queue bears some resemblance to an ear-trumpet.</p>
-
-<p>The total inattention of these three polite persons
-to the business of the stage, which at this moment
-almost convulses the children of Nature who are
-seated in the pit, is highly descriptive of that refined
-apathy which characterizes our people of fashion, and
-raises them above those mean passions that agitate
-the groundlings.</p>
-
-<p>One gentleman, indeed,<a name="FNanchor_175_175" id="FNanchor_175_175"></a><a href="#Footnote_175_175" class="fnanchor">[175]</a> is as affectedly unaffected
-as a man of the first world. By his saturnine cast of
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_248" id="Page_248">[248]</a></span>face and contracted brow, he is evidently a profound
-critic, and much too wise to laugh. He must indisputably
-be a very great genius; for, like Voltaire's
-Poccocurante, nothing can please him; and while
-those around open every avenue of their minds to
-mirth, and are willing to be delighted, though they
-do not well know why, he analyzes the drama by the
-laws of Aristotle, and finding those laws are violated,
-determines that the author ought to be hissed instead
-of being applauded. This it is to be so excellent a
-judge; this it is which gives a critic that exalted
-gratification which can never be attained by the
-illiterate: the supreme power of pointing out faults
-where others discern nothing but beauties, and preserving
-a rigid inflexibility of muscle while the sides
-of the vulgar herd are shaking with laughter. These
-merry mortals, thinking with Plato that it is no proof
-of a good stomach to nauseate every aliment presented
-them, do not inquire too nicely into <em>causes</em>;
-but, giving full scope to their risibility, display a set
-of features more highly ludicrous than I ever saw in
-any other print. It is to be regretted that the artist
-has not given us some clue by which we might have
-known what was the play which so much delighted
-his audience: I should conjecture that it was either
-one of Shakspeare's comedies, or a modern tragedy.
-Sentimental comedy was not the fashion of that day.</p>
-
-<p>The three sedate musicians in the orchestra, totally<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_249" id="Page_249">[249]</a></span>
-engrossed by minims and crotchets, are an admirable
-contrast to the company in the pit.</p>
-
-
-<p class="p2" />
-<h4>THE LECTURE.</h4>
-
-<p class="pfs70">DATUR VACUUM.</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container"><div class="poetry">
-<p class="verseq">"No wonder that science, and learning profound,</p>
-<p class="verse">In Oxford and Cambridge so greatly abound,</p>
-<p class="verse">When so many take thither a little each day,</p>
-<p class="verse">And we see very few who bring any away."</p>
-</div></div>
-
-<p class="p2" />
-<div class="figcenter">
-<a name="LE" id="LE"></a>
-<img src="images/i_250fp.jpg" width="600" alt="" />
-<div class="caption">THE LECTURE.</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class="noindent">I was once told by a fellow of a college that he would
-never purchase Hogarth's works, because Hogarth
-had in this print ridiculed one of the Universities.
-I endeavoured to defend the artist, by suggesting
-that this was not intended as a picture of what Oxford
-is now, but of what it was in days long past: that it
-was that kind of general satire with which no one
-should be offended, etc. etc. His reply was too
-memorable to be forgotten: "Sir, the Theatre, the
-Bench, the College of Physicians, and the Foot
-Guards, are fair objects of satire; but those venerable
-characters who have devoted their whole lives to feeding
-the lamp of learning with hallowed oil, are too
-sacred to be the sport of an uneducated painter. Their
-unremitting industry embraced the whole circle of the
-sciences, and in their logical disputations they displayed
-an acuteness that their followers must contemplate
-with astonishment. The present state of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_250" id="Page_250">[250]</a></span>
-Oxford it is not necessary for me to analyze, as you
-contend that the satire is not directed against that."</p>
-
-<p>In answer to this observation, which was uttered
-with becoming gravity, a gentleman present remarked
-as follows: "For some of the ancient customs of this
-seminary of learning I have much respect; but as to
-their dry treatises on logic, immaterial dissertations
-on materiality, and abstruse investigations of useless
-subjects, they are mere literary legerdemain. Their
-disputations being usually built on an undefinable
-chimera, are solved by a paradox. Instead of exercising
-their power of reason, they exert their powers
-of sophistry, and divide and subdivide every subject
-with such casuistical minuteness, that those who are
-not convinced are almost invariably confounded.
-This custom, it must be granted, is not quite so prevalent
-as it once was: a general spirit of reform is
-rapidly diffusing itself; and though I have heard
-cold-blooded declaimers assert that these shades of
-science are become the retreats of ignorance and
-the haunts of dissipation, I consider them as the
-great schools of urbanity, and favourite seats of the
-<i lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">belles lettres</i>. By the <i lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">belles lettres</i> I mean history,
-biography, and poetry; that all these are universally
-cultivated, I can exemplify by the manner in which
-a highly accomplished young man, who is considered
-as a model by his fellow-collegians, divides his hours.</p>
-
-<p>"At breakfast I found him studying the marvellous
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_251" id="Page_251">[251]</a></span>and eventful history of <cite>Baron Munchausen</cite>; a work
-whose periods are equally free from the long-winded
-obscurity of Tacitus, and the asthmatic terseness
-of Sallust. While his hair was dressing, he enlarged
-his imagination and improved his morals by studying
-Doctor what's his name's <cite>Abridgment of Chesterfield's
-Principles of Politeness</cite>. To furnish himself
-with biographical information, and add to his stock
-of useful anecdote, he studied the <cite>Lives of the Highwaymen</cite>;
-in which he found many opportunities of
-exercising his genius and judgment in drawing parallels
-between the virtues and exploits of these modern
-worthies, and those dignified and almost deified
-ancient heroes whose deeds are recorded in Plutarch
-and Nepos.</p>
-
-<p>"With poetical studies he is furnished by the English
-operas, which, added to the prologues, epilogues,
-and odes of the day, afford him higher entertainment
-than he could find in Homer or Virgil: he has not
-stored his memory with many epigrams, but of puns
-has a plentiful stock, and in <i lang="la" xml:lang="la">conundra</i> is a wholesale
-dealer. At the same college I know a most striking
-contrast, whose reading"&mdash;&mdash; But as his opponent
-would hear no more, my advocate dropped the subject;
-and I will follow his example.</p>
-
-<p>It seems probable that when the artist engraved
-this print he had only a general reference to an university
-lecture; the words <i lang="la" xml:lang="la">datur vacuum</i> were an<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_252" id="Page_252">[252]</a></span>
-after-thought. I have seen prints without the inscription,
-and in some of the early impressions it is
-written with a pen.</p>
-
-<p>The scene is laid at Oxford, and the person reading,
-universally admitted to be a Mr. Fisher of Jesus
-College, <em>registrat</em> of the university, with whose consent
-this portrait was taken, and who lived until the 18th
-of March 1761. That he should wish to have such
-a face handed down to posterity in such company
-is rather extraordinary; for all the band, except one
-man, have been steeped in the stream of stupidity.
-This gentleman has the profile of penetration; a
-projecting forehead, a Roman nose, thin lips, and a
-long pointed chin. His eye is bent on vacancy: it
-is evidently directed to the moon-faced idiot that
-crowns the pyramid, at whose round head, contrasted
-by a cornered cap, he with difficulty supresses a laugh.
-Three fellows on the right hand of this fat, contented
-"first-born transmitter of a foolish face," have most
-degraded characters, and are much fitter for the
-stable than the college. If they ever read, it must
-be in Bracken's <cite>Farriery</cite>, or <cite>The Country Gentleman's
-Recreation</cite>. Two square-capped students a little
-beneath the top, one of whom is holding converse
-with an adjoining profile, and the other lifting up
-his eyebrows and staring without sight, have the
-same misfortune that attended our first James&mdash;their
-tongues are rather too large. A figure in the left-hand<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_253" id="Page_253">[253]</a></span>
-corner has shut his eyes to think; and having,
-in his attempt to separate a syllogism, placed the
-forefinger of his right hand upon his forehead, has
-fallen asleep. The professor, a little above the book,
-endeavours by a projection of his under lip to assume
-importance; such characters are not uncommon: they
-are more solicitous to look wise than to be so. Of
-Mr. Fisher it is not necessary to say much: he sat
-for his portrait for the express purpose of having it
-inserted in the "Lecture!"&mdash;We want no other testimony
-of his talents. To the whole tribe I bid a long
-and last adieu.</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container"><div class="poetry">
-<p class="verseq">"Ye dull deluders, truth's destructive foes,</p>
-<p class="verse">Cold sons of fiction, clad in stupid prose;</p>
-<p class="verse">Ye treacherous leaders, who, yourselves in doubt,</p>
-<p class="verse">Light up false fires, and send us far about;</p>
-<p class="verse">Still may the spider round your pages spin,</p>
-<p class="verse">Subtle and slow, her emblematic gin!</p>
-<p class="verse">Buried in dust, and lost in silence dwell,</p>
-<p class="verse">Most potent, grave, and reverend friends&mdash;farewell!"</p>
-</div></div>
-
-
-<p class="p2" />
-<h4>REHEARSAL OF THE ORATORIO OF JUDITH.</h4>
-
-<div class="poetry-container"><div class="poetry">
-<p class="verseq">"O cara, cara! silence all that train;</p>
-<p class="verse">Joy to great chaos! let division reign."</p>
-</div></div>
-
-<p class="p2" />
-<div class="figcenter">
-<a name="OR" id="OR"></a>
-<img src="images/i_254fp.jpg" width="600" alt="" />
-<div class="caption">THE ORCHESTRA.</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class="noindent">The oratorio of <cite>Judith</cite> was written by Esquire
-William Huggins,<a name="FNanchor_176_176" id="FNanchor_176_176"></a><a href="#Footnote_176_176" class="fnanchor">[176]</a> honoured by the music of William<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_254" id="Page_254">[254]</a></span>
-de Fesch, aided by new painted scenery and <i lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">magnifique</i>
-decoration, and in the year 1733 brought upon the
-stage. As De Fesch<a name="FNanchor_177_177" id="FNanchor_177_177"></a><a href="#Footnote_177_177" class="fnanchor">[177]</a> was a German and a genius,
-we may fairly presume it was well set; and there
-was at that time, as at this, a sort of musical mania,
-that paid much greater attention to sounds than to
-sense. Notwithstanding all these points in her favour,
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_255" id="Page_255">[255]</a></span>when the Jewish heroine had made her theatrical
-<i lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">début</i>, and so effectually smote Holofernes,</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container"><div class="poetry">
-<p class="verse12">"As to sever</p>
-<p class="verse">His head from his great trunk for ever, and for ever,"</p>
-</div></div>
-
-<p class="noindent">the audience compelled her to make her exit. To
-set aside this partial and unjust decree, Mr. Huggins
-appealed to the public, and printed<a name="FNanchor_178_178" id="FNanchor_178_178"></a><a href="#Footnote_178_178" class="fnanchor">[178]</a> his oratorio.
-Though it was adorned with a frontispiece designed
-by Hogarth and engraved by Vandergucht, the
-world could not be compelled to read, and the unhappy
-writer had no other resource than the consolatory
-reflection, that his work was superlatively
-excellent, but unluckily printed in a tasteless age:<a name="FNanchor_179_179" id="FNanchor_179_179"></a><a href="#Footnote_179_179" class="fnanchor">[179]</a> a
-comfortable and solacing self-consciousness, which
-hath, I verily believe, prevented many a great genius
-from becoming his own executioner.</p>
-
-<p>To paint a sound is impossible; but as far as art
-can go towards it, Mr. Hogarth has gone in this print.
-The tenor, treble, and bass of these ear-piercing
-choristers are so decisively discriminated, that we all
-but hear them.</p>
-
-<p>The principal figure, whose head, hands, and feet
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_256" id="Page_256">[256]</a></span>are in equal agitation, has very properly tied on his
-spectacles; it would have been prudent to have tied
-on his periwig also, for by the energy of his action
-he has shaken it from his head, and, absorbed in an
-eager attention to true time, is totally unconscious of
-his loss.</p>
-
-<p>A <em>gentleman</em>&mdash;pardon me, I meant <em>a singer</em>&mdash;in a
-bag-wig, immediately beneath his uplifted hand, I
-suspect to be of foreign growth. <em>It</em> has the engaging
-air of <em>an importation from Italy</em>.</p>
-
-<p>The little figure in the sinister corner is, it seems,
-intended for a Mr. Tothall, a woollen-draper, who lived
-in Tavistock Court, and was Hogarth's intimate
-friend.</p>
-
-<p>The name of the performer on his right hand,</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container"><div class="poetry">
-<p class="verse8">"Whose growling bass</p>
-<p class="verse">Would drown the clarion of the braying ass,"</p>
-</div></div>
-
-<p class="noindent">I cannot learn; nor do I think that this group were
-meant for particular portraits, but a general representation
-of the violent distortions into which these
-crotchet-mongers draw their features on such solemn
-occasions.</p>
-
-<p>Even the head of the bass viol has air and character:
-by the band under the chin, it gives some idea
-of a professor,<a name="FNanchor_180_180" id="FNanchor_180_180"></a><a href="#Footnote_180_180" class="fnanchor">[180]</a> or what is I think called a Mus. D.</p>
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_257" id="Page_257">[257]</a></span></p>
-<p>The words now singing, "The world shall bow
-to the Assyrian throne," are extracted from Mr.
-Huggins' oratorio; the etching is in a most masterly
-style, and was originally given as a subscription-ticket
-to "The Modern Midnight Conversation."</p>
-
-<p>I have seen a small political print on Sir Robert
-Walpole's administration, entitled, <cite>Excise, a new
-Ballad Opera</cite>, of which this was unquestionably the
-basis. Beneath it is the following learned and
-poetical motto:</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container"><div class="poetry">
-<div class="stanza">
-<p class="verse8">"Experto crede Roberto."</p>
-</div>
-<div class="stanza">
-<p class="verseq">"Mind how each hireling songster tunes his throat,</p>
-<p class="verse">And the vile knight beats time to every note:</p>
-<p class="verse">So Nero sung while Rome was all in flames,</p>
-<p class="verse">But time shall brand with infamy their names."</p>
-</div></div></div>
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_258" id="Page_258">[258]</a></span></p>
-
-<p class="p2" />
-<p class="pfs70">ET PLURIMA MORTIS IMAGO.</p>
-
-<h4>THE COMPANY OF UNDERTAKERS,</h4>
-
-<p class="p2" />
-<div class="figcenter">
-<a name="CU" id="CU"></a>
-<img src="images/i_258fp.jpg" width="550" alt="" />
-<div class="caption">THE COMPANY OF UNDERTAKERS.</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class="noindent">"Beareth sable, an urinal proper, between twelve
-quack heads of the second, and twelve cane heads <span class="fs80">OR</span>,
-consultant. On a chief<a name="FNanchor_181_181" id="FNanchor_181_181"></a><a href="#Footnote_181_181" class="fnanchor">[181]</a> nebulæ,<a name="FNanchor_182_182" id="FNanchor_182_182"></a><a href="#Footnote_182_182" class="fnanchor">[182]</a> ermine, one complete
-doctor<a name="FNanchor_183_183" id="FNanchor_183_183"></a><a href="#Footnote_183_183" class="fnanchor">[183]</a> issuant checkie, sustaining in his right
-hand a baton of the second. On his dexter and
-sinister side, two demi-doctors, issuant of the second,
-and two cane heads issuant of the third: the first
-having one eye couchant, towards the dexter side of
-the escutcheon; the second faced per pale proper,
-and gules guardant, with this motto, 'Et plurima
-mortis imago.'"</p>
-
-<p>It has been said of the ancients, that they began
-by attempting to make physic a science, and failed;
-of the moderns, that they began by attempting to
-make it a trade, and succeeded. This company are
-moderns to a man; and if we may judge of their
-capacities by their countenances, are indeed a most
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_259" id="Page_259">[259]</a></span>sapient society. Their practice is very extensive, and
-they go about taking guineas,</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container"><div class="poetry">
-<p class="verseq">"Far as the weekly bills can reach around,</p>
-<p class="verse">From Kent Street end, to fam'd St. Giles's pound."</p>
-</div></div>
-
-<p class="noindent">Many of them are unquestionably portraits;<a name="FNanchor_184_184" id="FNanchor_184_184"></a><a href="#Footnote_184_184" class="fnanchor">[184]</a> but as
-these grave and sage descendants of Galen are long
-since gone to that place where they before sent their
-patients, I am unable to ascertain any of them, except
-the three who are for distinction placed in the chief
-or most honourable part of the escutcheon. Those
-whom, from their exalted situation, we may naturally
-conclude the most distinguished and sagacious leeches
-of their day, have marks too obtrusive to be mistaken.
-He towards the dexter side of the escutcheon is
-determined by an eye in the head of his cane to be
-the all-accomplished Chevalier Taylor,<a name="FNanchor_185_185" id="FNanchor_185_185"></a><a href="#Footnote_185_185" class="fnanchor">[185]</a> in whose
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_260" id="Page_260">[260]</a></span>marvellous and surprising history, written by his own
-hand, and published in 1761, is recorded such events
-relative to himself and others<a name="FNanchor_186_186" id="FNanchor_186_186"></a><a href="#Footnote_186_186" class="fnanchor">[186]</a> as have excited more
-astonishment than that incomparable romance, <cite>Don
-Belianis of Greece</cite>, <cite>the Arabian Nights</cite>, or <cite>Sir John
-Mandeville his Travels</cite>.</p>
-
-<p>The centre figure, arrayed in a harlequin jacket,
-with a bone, or what the painter denominates a baton,
-in the right hand, is generally considered designed
-for Mrs. Mapp, a masculine woman, daughter to one
-Wallin, a bone-setter at Hindon, in Wiltshire. This
-female Thalestris, incompatible as it may seem with
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_261" id="Page_261">[261]</a></span>her sex, adopted her father's profession, travelled about
-the country, calling herself <em>crazy Sally</em>; and like another
-Hercules, did wonders by strength of arm! An
-old gentleman, who knew this lady, assures me, that
-notwithstanding all the unkind things which her medical
-brethren said of her ignorance, etc., she was entitled
-to an equal portion of professional praise with many
-of those who decried her; for not more than nineteen
-out of twenty of her patients died under her hands.</p>
-
-<p>The <cite>Grub Street Journal</cite>, and some other papers
-of that day, are crowded with paragraphs<a name="FNanchor_189_189" id="FNanchor_189_189"></a><a href="#Footnote_189_189" class="fnanchor">[189]</a> relative to
-her cures and her consequence.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_262" id="Page_262">[262]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>On the <ins class="corr" title="Transcriber's Note&mdash;Original text: 'sinster side is Doctor'">sinister side is Doctor</ins> Ward, generally called
-Spot Ward, from his left cheek being marked with
-a claret colour. This gentleman was of a respectable
-family,<a name="FNanchor_191_191" id="FNanchor_191_191"></a><a href="#Footnote_191_191" class="fnanchor">[191]</a> and though not highly educated, had
-talents very superior to either of his coadjutors.</p>
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_263" id="Page_263">[263]</a></span></p>
-<p>For the chief, this must suffice; as for the twelve
-quack heads and twelve cane heads <span class="fs80">OR</span>, consultant,
-united with the cross-bones at the corners, they have
-a most mortuary appearance, and do indeed convey
-a general image of death.</p>
-
-<p>In the time of Lucian, a philosopher was distinguished<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_264" id="Page_264">[264]</a></span>
-by three things: his avarice, his impudence,
-and his beard. In the time of Hogarth, medicine was
-a mystery,<a name="FNanchor_192_192" id="FNanchor_192_192"></a><a href="#Footnote_192_192" class="fnanchor">[192]</a> and there were three things which distinguished
-the physician: his gravity, his cane head, and
-his periwig. With these leading requisites, this venerable
-party are most amply gifted. To specify every
-character is not necessary; but the upper figure on the
-dexter side, with a wig like a weeping willow, should
-not be overlooked. His lemon-like aspect must curdle
-the blood of all his patients. In the countenances of
-his brethren there is no want of acids; but however
-sour each individual was in his day&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container"><div class="poetry">
-<p class="verse8">"A doctor of renown,</p>
-<p class="verse">To none but such as rust in health unknown,</p>
-<p class="verse">And save or slay, this privilege they claim,</p>
-<p class="verse">Or death, or life, the bright reward's the same."<a name="FNanchor_193_193" id="FNanchor_193_193"></a><a href="#Footnote_193_193" class="fnanchor">[193]</a></p>
-</div></div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_265" id="Page_265">[265]</a></span></p>
-
-<p class="noindent">Ward, Taylor, and Mapp were considered as a proper
-trio by other persons besides Hogarth: some lines
-beginning as follows, were written about the latter end
-of 1736:&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container"><div class="poetry">
-<p class="verseq">"In this bright age three wonder-workers rise,</p>
-<p class="verse">Whose operations puzzle all the wise;</p>
-<p class="verse">To lame and blind, by dint of manual slight,</p>
-<p class="verse">Mapp gives the use of limbs, and Taylor sight.</p>
-<p class="verse">But greater Ward," etc.</p>
-</div></div>
-
-
-<p class="p2" />
-<h4>GROUP OF HEADS</h4>
-
-<p class="pfs70">INTENDED TO DISPLAY THE DIFFERENCE BETWIXT CHARACTER
-AND CARICATURE.</p>
-
-<p class="pfs80">For a further explanation of this difference, see the Preface to
-<cite>Joseph Andrews</cite>.<a name="FNanchor_194_194" id="FNanchor_194_194"></a><a href="#Footnote_194_194" class="fnanchor">[194]</a></p>
-
-<p class="p2" />
-<div class="figcenter">
-<a name="DI" id="DI"></a>
-<img src="images/i_266fp.jpg" width="650" alt="" />
-<div class="caption">CHARACTERS<span class="pad4">CARICATVRAS</span></div>
-</div>
-
-<p class="noindent">"In Lairesse; still more in Poussin; and most of all
-in Raphael; simplicity, greatness of conception, tranquillity,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_266" id="Page_266">[266]</a></span>
-superiority, sublimity the most exalted!
-Raphael can never be enough studied, although he
-only exercised his mind on the rarest forms, the
-grandest traits of countenance.</p>
-
-<p>"In Hogarth, alas, how little of the noble, how
-little of beauteous expression, is to be found in this,
-I had almost said, false prophet of beauty! But what
-an immense treasure of features, of meanness in excess,
-vulgarity the most disgusting, humour the most
-irresistible, and vice the most unmanly!"&mdash;Lavater's
-<cite>Essays on Physiognomy</cite>.</p>
-
-<p>In this rhapsody there is some truth; but the
-philosopher of Zurich should have recollected that
-Hogarth could not be expected to attain what he never
-attempted. Sublimity exalted, simplicity angelic,
-and the ideal grandeur of superior beings, he left to
-those who delineated subjects which demanded such
-characters; and contented himself with representing
-Nature, not as it ought to be, but as he found it.
-That he had little reverence for the dreams of those
-who portrayed imaginary beings, I have had occasion
-to remark; but that he respected their waking thoughts
-is evinced in this print, where the heads of three
-figures from Raphael's Cartoons are introduced under
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_267" id="Page_267">[267]</a></span>the article character, in opposition to the fantastic caricatures
-of Cavalier Chezze, Annibal Characi,<a name="FNanchor_195_195" id="FNanchor_195_195"></a><a href="#Footnote_195_195" class="fnanchor">[195]</a> and
-Leonard da Vinci: the last of whom, I am very sorry
-to see so classed; for to his anatomical knowledge
-the late Dr. Hunter gave the strongest testimony, by
-declaring his intention to publish a volume illustrated
-by the designs of this artist, as anatomical studies.</p>
-
-<p>I have often seen three engravings from the same
-picture, by an Italian, an English, and a French artist,
-which, with a tolerable correctness of outline, have
-in their general characters a dissimilarity that is
-astonishing. Each engraver gives his national air.
-The three heads from Raphael, at the bottom of this
-print, are etched by Hogarth, and sufficiently marked
-to determine the master from whence they are copied;
-but their grandeur, elevation, and simplicity is totally
-evaporated.</p>
-
-<p>With angels, apostles, and saints, he was not
-happy. In the group placed above them he has been
-more successful. Hogarth was less of a mannerist
-than almost any other artist; for though there are
-above a hundred profiles, I discover no copy from
-another painter; no repetition of his own works:
-they are all delineated from nature, and the most
-careless observer must discover many resemblances:
-to the physiognomist, they are an inexhaustible
-study.</p>
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_268" id="Page_268">[268]</a></span></p>
-<p>This print was given <ins class="corr" title="Transcriber's Note&mdash;Original text: 'as a subscripton-ticket'">as a subscription-ticket</ins> to the
-six plates of "Marriage à la Mode."</p>
-
-
-<p class="p2" />
-<h3>SARAH MALCOLM.</h3>
-
-<p class="negin2 fs90"><em>Executed opposite Mitre Court, Fleet Street, on the 7th of
-March 1733, for the murder of Mrs. Lydia Duncombe,
-Elizabeth Harrison, and Anne Price.</em></p>
-
-<p class="pfs80">"How shalt thou hope for mercy, rendering none?"</p>
-
-<p class="p2" />
-<div class="figcenter">
-<a name="SM" id="SM"></a>
-<img src="images/i_268fp.jpg" width="650" alt="" />
-<div class="caption">SARAH MALCOLM.</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class="noindent">The portrait of this sanguinary wretch Mr. Hogarth
-painted in Newgate; and to Sir James Thornhill, who
-accompanied him, he made the following observation:
-"I see by this woman's features that she is capable of
-any wickedness."</p>
-
-<p>Of his skill in physiognomy I entertain a very high
-opinion; but as Sarah sat for her picture after condemnation,
-I suspect his observation to resemble
-those prophecies which were made after the completion
-of events they professed to foretell. She has a
-locked-up mouth, wide nostrils, and a penetrating eye,
-with a general air that indicates close observation
-and masculine courage; but I do not discover either
-depravity or cruelty; though her conduct in this, as
-well as some other horrible transactions,<a name="FNanchor_196_196" id="FNanchor_196_196"></a><a href="#Footnote_196_196" class="fnanchor">[196]</a> evinced an
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_269" id="Page_269">[269]</a></span>uncommon portion of both, and proved her a Lady
-Macbeth in low life.</p>
-
-<p>Her infatuation in lurking about the Temple after
-perpetration of the crime for which she suffered, it is
-difficult to account for upon any other principle than
-that general remorse and horror which tortures the
-minds of those who shed a brother's blood; and that
-overruling Providence, which by means most strange
-brings their guilt to light and their crimes to punishment;</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container"><div class="poetry">
-<p class="verseq">"For murder, though it have no tongue, will speak</p>
-<p class="verse">With most miraculous organ."</p>
-</div></div>
-
-<p>The circumstances which attended her commitment
-and execution were briefly as follows:&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>At noon, on Sunday the fourth of February 1733,
-Mrs. Duncombe, a widow lady, upwards of eighty
-years old (who lived up four pair of stairs, next staircase
-to the Inner Temple library); Elizabeth Harrison,
-another elderly person who was her companion;
-and Anne Price, her servant, about seventeen years of
-age, were found murdered in their beds. The maid-servant,
-who was supposed to be murdered first, had
-her throat cut from ear to ear; but by her cap being
-off, and her hair much entangled, it was thought she<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_270" id="Page_270">[270]</a></span>
-had struggled. The companion, it was supposed, was
-strangled; though there were two or three wounds in
-her throat that appeared as if they had been given
-by a nail. Mrs. Duncombe was probably smothered,
-and killed last, as she was found lying across the
-bed with a gown on; though the others were in bed.
-A trunk in the room was broke open and rifled.</p>
-
-<p>About one o'clock at night, a Mr. Kerrell, who had
-chambers on the same staircase, came home, and to
-his great surprise found Sarah Malcolm, who was his
-laundress, in his room: he asked her how she came
-to be there at so unseasonable an hour, and if she
-had heard of any one being taken up for the murder?
-She replied, "that no person had yet been taken up;
-but a gentleman who had chambers beneath, and
-had been absent two or three days, was violently suspected."
-"Be that as it may," said Mr. Kerrell, "you
-were Mrs. Duncombe's laundress, and no one who
-knew her shall ever come into these chambers until
-her murderer is discovered: pack up your things and
-go away." While she was thus employed, Kerrell
-observing a bundle upon the floor, and thinking her
-behaviour suspicious, called a watchman to whom he
-gave her in charge. When she was taken away,
-and he searched his rooms with more care, he found
-several bundles of linen, and a silver pint tankard,
-with the handle bloodied. This confirmed his suspicions,
-and, accompanied by a friend, he went down<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_271" id="Page_271">[271]</a></span>
-stairs, and asked the watchman where he had taken
-Malcolm? This faithful guardian of the night very
-coolly replied, "that she had promised to come again
-next day, and he had let her go." Mr. Kerrell declaring
-that if she was not immediately produced he
-would commit him to Newgate in her stead, the
-fellow went in search of her; and though her lodging
-was in Shoreditch, he found this infatuated woman
-sitting between two other watchman at the Temple
-gate. She was then committed to Newgate; and
-there was found concealed in her hair, eighteen
-guineas, twenty moidores, five broad pieces, five
-crown pieces, and a few shillings.<a name="FNanchor_197_197" id="FNanchor_197_197"></a><a href="#Footnote_197_197" class="fnanchor">[197]</a></p>
-
-<p>On her examination before Sir Richard Brocas,
-she confessed to sharing in the produce of the robbery,
-but declared herself innocent of the murders;
-asserting upon oath, that Thomas and James Alexander,
-and Mary Tracy, were principal parties in
-the whole transaction. Notwithstanding this, the
-coroner's jury brought in their verdict of wilful
-murder against Sarah Malcolm only, it not then
-appearing that any other person was concerned.
-Her confession they considered as a mere subterfuge,
-none knowing such people as she pretended
-were her accomplices.</p>
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_272" id="Page_272">[272]</a></span></p>
-<p>A few days after, a boy about seventeen years of
-age was hired as a servant by a person who kept the
-Red Lion alehouse at Bridewell Bridge; and hearing
-it said in his master's house that Sarah Malcolm
-had given in an information against one Thomas
-and James Alexander, and Mary Tracy, said to his
-master, "My name is James Alexander, and I have
-a brother named Thomas, and my mother nursed a
-woman where Sarah Malcolm lived." Upon this
-acknowledgment, the master sent to Alstone, turnkey
-of Newgate; and the boy being confronted with
-Malcolm, she immediately charged him with being
-concealed under Mrs. Duncombe's bed, previous to
-letting in Tracy and his brother, by whom and himself
-the murders were committed. On this evidence
-he was detained; and frankly telling where his
-brother and Tracy were to be found, they also were
-taken into custody, and brought before Sir Richard
-Brocas. Here Malcolm persisted in her former asseverations;
-but the magistrate thought her unworthy
-of credit, and would have discharged them; but
-being advised by some persons present to act with
-more caution, committed them all to Newgate. Their
-distress was somewhat alleviated by the gentlemen
-of the Temple Society, who, fully convinced of
-their innocence, allowed each of them one shilling
-per diem during the time of their confinement.
-This ought to be recorded to the honour of the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_273" id="Page_273">[273]</a></span>
-<em>law</em>, as it has not often been the <em>practice</em> of the
-profession.</p>
-
-<p>Though Malcolm's presence of mind seems to have
-forsaken her at the time when she lurked about the
-Temple, without making any attempt to escape, and
-left the produce of her theft in situations that rendered
-discovery inevitable, she by the time of trial
-recovered her recollection, made a most acute and
-ingenious defence,<a name="FNanchor_198_198" id="FNanchor_198_198"></a><a href="#Footnote_198_198" class="fnanchor">[198]</a> and cross-examined the witnesses
-with all the black-robed artifice of a gentleman bred
-up to the bar. The circumstances were, however,
-so clear as to leave no doubt in the minds of the
-court, and the jury brought in their verdict&mdash;guilty.</p>
-
-<p>On Wednesday the 7th of March, about ten in the
-morning, she was taken in a cart from Newgate to
-the place of execution, facing Mitre Court, Fleet
-Street,<a name="FNanchor_199_199" id="FNanchor_199_199"></a><a href="#Footnote_199_199" class="fnanchor">[199]</a> and there suffered death on a gibbet erected
-for the occasion. She was neatly dressed in a crape
-mourning gown, white apron, sarcenet hood, and
-black gloves: carried her head aside with an air of
-affectation, and was said to be painted. She was
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_274" id="Page_274">[274]</a></span>attended by Doctor Middleton of St. Bride's, her
-friend Mr. Peddington, and Guthrie, the ordinary of
-Newgate. She appeared devout and penitent, and
-earnestly requested Peddington would print a paper
-she had given him<a name="FNanchor_200_200" id="FNanchor_200_200"></a><a href="#Footnote_200_200" class="fnanchor">[200]</a> the night before, which contained,
-not a confession of the murder, but protestations of
-her innocence; and a recapitulation of what she had
-before said relative to the Alexanders, etc. This
-wretched woman, though only twenty-five years of
-age, was so lost to all sense of her situation, as to
-rush into eternity with a lie upon her lips. She much
-wished to see Mr. Kerrell, and acquitted him of every
-imputation thrown out at her trial.</p>
-
-<p>After she had conversed some time with the ministers,
-and the executioner began to do his duty, she
-fainted away; but recovering, was in a short space
-afterwards executed. Her corpse was carried to an
-undertaker's on Snow Hill, where multitudes of
-people resorted, and gave money to see it: among
-the rest, a gentleman in deep mourning kissed her,
-and gave the attendants half-a-crown.</p>
-
-<p>Professor Martin dissected this notorious murderess,
-and afterwards presented her skeleton, in a glass case,
-to the Botanic Gardens at Cambridge, where it still
-remains.</p>
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_275" id="Page_275">[275]</a></span></p>
-<p>The portrait from which this print was engraved
-is remarkably well painted, and now in the possession
-of Mr. Josiah Boydell, at West End. It was probably
-copied from that which was painted in Newgate,
-which was in the collection of Mr. Horace Walpole,
-at Strawberry Hill. It will not appear extraordinary
-that Hogarth should have delineated her twice, when
-we consider, that from the print he published there
-were four copies, besides one in wood, which was
-engraved for the <cite>Gentleman's Magazine</cite>.</p>
-
-<p>Thus eager were the public to possess the portrait
-of this most atrocious woman. All these delineations
-were what the painters call half-lengths; her whole
-figure was never engraved, except for this work.</p>
-
-
-<p class="p2" />
-<h3>COLUMBUS BREAKING THE EGG.</h3>
-
-<div class="poetry-container"><div class="poetry">
-<p class="verseq">"Why on these shores are we with pride survey'd,</p>
-<p class="verse">Admir'd as heroes, and as gods obey'd!</p>
-<p class="verse">Unless great acts superior merit prove,</p>
-<p class="verse">And vindicate the bounteous powers above;</p>
-<p class="verse">That when, with wond'ring eyes, our martial bands</p>
-<p class="verse">Behold our deeds transcending our commands,</p>
-<p class="verse">Such, they may cry, deserve the sov'reign state,</p>
-<p class="verse">Whom those that envy dare not imitate?"</p>
-</div></div>
-
-<p class="p2" />
-<div class="figcenter">
-<a name="CO" id="CO"></a>
-<img src="images/i_276fp.jpg" width="650" alt="" />
-<div class="caption">COLUMBUS AND THE EGG.</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class="noindent">Such is the animated apostrophe of Sarpedon in the
-energetic numbers of Alexander Pope, and it is not
-more appropriate to Glaucus than to the illustrious
-character who gives the subject of this print. Had<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_276" id="Page_276">[276]</a></span>
-a Greek discovered America, Sculpture would have
-erected statues and raised altars to his honour;
-Architecture built temples to perpetuate his fame;
-and by Poetry he must have been deified.</p>
-
-<p>The new creation of Columbus&mdash;for a new creation
-it may be denominated&mdash;absorbed every former discovery,
-and sunk to insignificance the boasted conquests
-of Alexander. Previous to this voyage a world
-of water formed what was deemed an insurmountable
-barrier between the inhabitants of one planet;&mdash;"He
-spread his canvas wings, and pass'd the mound."</p>
-
-<p>As our own Newton unveiled the celestial globe,<a name="FNanchor_201_201" id="FNanchor_201_201"></a><a href="#Footnote_201_201" class="fnanchor">[201]</a>
-and removed that cloud which had before shadowed
-the face of heaven, Columbus, from the bare inspection
-of a map of one world, concluded that there must be
-another. He sailed west, brought together continents
-that nature had severed, and was the first adventurer
-in a voyage which, from its consequent enterprises,
-has added more square miles to the dominions of
-European powers than the sovereigns by whom he
-was employed possessed acres.<a name="FNanchor_202_202" id="FNanchor_202_202"></a><a href="#Footnote_202_202" class="fnanchor">[202]</a> His perseverance
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_277" id="Page_277">[277]</a></span>must have been equal to his genius; for he had to
-struggle with the rooted prejudices of his contemporaries,<a name="FNanchor_203_203" id="FNanchor_203_203"></a><a href="#Footnote_203_203" class="fnanchor">[203]</a>
-as well as the freezing indifference of those
-monarchs to whom he tendered his service.</p>
-
-<p>Genoa, which was his native country, treated his
-scheme as visionary. Our seventh Henry, mean, cold-blooded,
-and avaricious, would not hazard the loss of
-that treasure which he adored; and the Emperor
-had neither gold to fit out a fleet nor harbours to
-receive shipping. The attention of John the Second<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_278" id="Page_278">[278]</a></span>
-of Portugal was engrossed by the coast of Africa, and
-Charles the Eighth of France was in his minority.
-The Venetians had maritime power, and maritime
-spirit; but Columbus was a Genoese, and had too
-much of the <i lang="la" xml:lang="la">amor patriæ</i> to throw such advantages as
-he foresaw would accrue to those who prosecuted his
-plan into the hands of the rivals and enemies of his
-country. He fixed his hopes on the court of Spain,
-and his hopes were not disappointed. Ferdinand of
-Aragon and Isabella of Castile had by their marriage
-united all Spain under one dominion: to them he
-applied; and, with a perseverance that could only be
-supported by a conscious certainty that his project,
-if undertaken, must be successful, attended their court
-eight tedious years! At the end of this time, two
-merchants, trusting to royal security, and advancing
-seventeen thousand ducats towards fitting out the
-vessels, Columbus received his patent; and on the
-23d of August 1492 set sail, with three ships only,
-from the port of Palos in Andalusia.<a name="FNanchor_204_204" id="FNanchor_204_204"></a><a href="#Footnote_204_204" class="fnanchor">[204]</a></p>
-
-<p>In less than a month after his departure from the
-Canaries, he discovered the first island in America;<a name="FNanchor_205_205" id="FNanchor_205_205"></a><a href="#Footnote_205_205" class="fnanchor">[205]</a>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_279" id="Page_279">[279]</a></span>and like our immortal Admiral Drake, found the fair
-harvest he had hoped to reap in great danger of
-being blighted by the murmuring and discontent of
-his crew. To check this mutinous spirit required both
-resolution and address, and in Columbus they were
-united. He quieted his companions, and, with true
-catholic formality, baptized his new discovery St. Salvadore.
-He soon after made the Lucayan Islands,
-together with those of Cuba and Hispaniola, now
-called St. Domingo; and, at the end of nine months,
-returned with some of the natives, a quantity of gold,
-and sundry curious productions of the places he had
-visited,&mdash;all of which he laid at the feet of Isabella
-and Ferdinand.</p>
-
-<p>Their Majesties were neither insensible of his merit
-nor ungrateful for his services: they suffered him to
-be seated, and added a privilege heretofore confined
-to grandees&mdash;the honour of being covered in their<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_280" id="Page_280">[280]</a></span>
-presence; and crowned their favours by creating him
-admiral and viceroy of whatever he should add to
-their dominions.</p>
-
-<p>Columbus having found a new empire, and explored
-a new world, was now considered as more
-than mortal. Those who had loudly decried his
-plan as the chimerical project of a madman, were
-most eager to patronize the heaven-born navigator,
-and embark under his command. He a second time
-set sail, not with three small vessels, but an armament
-of seventeen ships, manned by a crew who
-almost adored him, and discovered Jamaica, the
-Caribbees, and several other islands.</p>
-
-<p>His elevation had been too sudden <ins class="corr" title="Transcriber's Note&mdash;Original text: 'to be permament'">to be permanent</ins>;
-his talents were too transcendent to be
-seen without envy. Notwithstanding the services
-which he had rendered to Spain, the dignities with
-which he was invested, and the flattering prospects
-with which he set sail, he was brought home prisoner,
-by judges who had been sent on board the same
-vessel as spies upon his conduct; and arrived at the
-court where he had a short time before been covered
-with laurels&mdash;loaded with chains.</p>
-
-<p>For this mortifying degradation he was indebted
-to Fonseca, Bishop of Burgos, the intendant of the
-expedition. Isabella, ashamed of seeing a man to
-whom she was indebted for the brightest jewel in her
-crown thus dishonoured, ordered him to be imme<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_281" id="Page_281">[281]</a></span>diately
-set at liberty; but it does not appear that
-either queen or king punished the person by whose
-machinations he had been so ignominiously treated.
-Whether his royal protectors feared that he would
-retain whatever he might acquire, wished personally
-to scrutinize his actions, or had any other inducement,
-he was not suffered to leave Spain for upwards of four
-years. At the expiration of that time he was sent
-upon another voyage, discovered the continent at
-six degrees distant from the equator; and saw that
-part of the coast on which Carthagena has been since
-built.</p>
-
-<p>After several years' absence he returned to Spain,
-and in the year 1506 died at Valladolid. By the
-king's command, he was honoured with a magnificent
-funeral; and on the marble which covered his
-remains was the following concise and characteristic
-epitaph: <span class="smcap">Columbus gave Castile and Leon a
-New World</span>.</p>
-
-<p>By the success of his first voyage, doubt had been
-changed into admiration; from the honours with
-which he was rewarded, admiration degenerated into
-envy. To deny that his discovery carried in its train
-consequences infinitely more important than had
-resulted from any made since the creation, was impossible.
-His enemies had recourse to another
-expedient, and boldly asserted that there was neither
-wisdom in the plan nor hazard in the enterprise.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_282" id="Page_282">[282]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>When he was once at a Spanish supper, the company
-took this ground; and being by his narrative
-furnished with the reflections which had induced him
-to undertake his voyage, and the course that he had
-pursued in its completion, sagaciously observed, that
-"it was impossible for any man a degree above an
-idiot to have failed of success. The whole process
-was so obvious, it must have been seen by a man who
-was half blind! Nothing could be so easy!"</p>
-
-<p>"It is not difficult, now I have pointed out the
-way," was the answer of Columbus; "but easy as it
-will appear, when you are possessed of my method, I
-do not believe that, without such instruction, any
-person present could place one of these eggs upright
-on the table." The cloth, knives, and forks were
-thrown aside, and two of the party, placing their eggs
-as required, kept them steady with their fingers. One
-of them swore there could be no other way. "We will
-try," said the navigator; and giving an egg, which he
-held in his hand, a smart stroke upon the table, it
-remained upright.<a name="FNanchor_206_206" id="FNanchor_206_206"></a><a href="#Footnote_206_206" class="fnanchor">[206]</a> The emotions which this excited
-in the company are expressed in their countenances.
-In the be-ruffed booby at his left hand, it raises
-astonishment; he is a <span class="fs80">DEAR ME!</span> man, of the same<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_283" id="Page_283">[283]</a></span>
-family with Sterne's Simple Traveller, and came
-from <em>Amiens only yesterday</em>. The fellow behind him,
-beating his head, curses his own stupidity; and the
-whiskered ruffian, with his forefinger on the egg, is in
-his heart cursing Columbus. As to the two veterans
-on the other side, they have lived too long to be
-agitated with trifles: he who wears a cap exclaims,
-"Is this all!" and the other, with a bald head, "By
-St. Jago, I did not think of that!" In the face of
-Columbus there is not that violent and excessive
-triumph which is exhibited by little characters on
-little occasions: he is too elevated to be overbearing;
-and, pointing to the conical solution of his problematical
-conundrum, displays a calm superiority, and
-silent internal contempt.</p>
-
-<p>Two eels, twisted round the eggs upon the dish, are
-introduced as specimens of the line of beauty; which
-is again displayed on the table-cloth, and hinted at
-on the knife blade. In all these curves there is
-peculiar propriety; for the etching was given as a
-receipt-ticket to the <cite>Analysis</cite>, where this favourite
-undulating line forms the basis of his system.<a name="FNanchor_207_207" id="FNanchor_207_207"></a><a href="#Footnote_207_207" class="fnanchor">[207]</a></p>
-
-<p>In the print of Columbus there is evident reference
-to the criticisms<a name="FNanchor_208_208" id="FNanchor_208_208"></a><a href="#Footnote_208_208" class="fnanchor">[208]</a> on what Hogarth called his own
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_284" id="Page_284">[284]</a></span>discovery; and in truth the connoisseurs' remarks on
-the painter were dictated by a <ins class="corr" title="Transcriber's Note&mdash;Original text: 'similiar spirit'">similar spirit</ins> to those
-of the critics on the navigator: they first asserted
-there was no such line, and when he had proved that
-there was, gave the honour of discovery to Lomazzo,
-Michael Angelo, etc. etc.</p>
-
-
-<p class="p2" />
-<h3>THE FIVE ORDERS OF PERIWIGS.</h3>
-
-<p class="pfs70">AS THEY WERE WORN AT THE LATE CORONATION, MEASURED
-ARCHITECTONICALLY.</p>
-
-<p class="p2" />
-<div class="figcenter">
-<a name="PE" id="PE"></a>
-<a href="images/i_284fp-large.jpg">
-<img src="images/i_284fp.jpg" width="500" alt="" /></a>
-</div>
-
-<p class="center"><em>Advertisement (inserted under the Print).</em></p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p class="noindent">"In about seventeen years<a name="FNanchor_210_210" id="FNanchor_210_210"></a><a href="#Footnote_210_210" class="fnanchor">[210]</a> will be completed, in
-six volumes folio, price fifteen guineas, <cite>The Exact
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_285" id="Page_285">[285]</a></span>Measurements of the Periwigs of the Ancients</cite>; taken
-from the Statues, Bustos, and Basso Relievos of
-Athens, Palmyra, Balbec, and Rome; by Modesto,
-Periwig-meter, from Lagado. <em>N.B.</em>&mdash;None will be
-sold but to Subscribers.&mdash;Published as the Act directs,
-Oct. 15, 1761, by W. Hogarth."</p></div>
-
-<p>Previous to this print being published, Mr. Stuart,
-generally denominated Athenian Stuart, advertised
-that he intended to publish by subscription a book,
-entitled <cite>The Antiquities of Athens</cite>, measured and
-delineated by himself and Nicholas Revitt, painters
-and architects.<a name="FNanchor_211_211" id="FNanchor_211_211"></a><a href="#Footnote_211_211" class="fnanchor">[211]</a> The first volume of this excellent
-work was published in 1762; it received, and we may
-add it deserved, approbation from every man who
-had taste enough to relish those stupendous monuments
-of ancient art, which the barbarians who now
-possess the country either destroy or suffer to moulder
-into dust. "To leave a trace behind" was the object
-of Stuart's book; but Hogarth had so long accustomed
-himself to laugh at the grand gusto of the
-Grecian school, that I can readily suppose he at
-length thought any plan which might damp the
-public ardour for antiquity would be a correction of
-national taste.<a name="FNanchor_212_212" id="FNanchor_212_212"></a><a href="#Footnote_212_212" class="fnanchor">[212]</a> With this view he published the
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_286" id="Page_286">[286]</a></span>print now under consideration; and if ridicule were
-a test of truth, it must have effected his purpose.
-Minute accuracy is the leading feature of Stuart's
-book; minute accuracy is the leading point in
-Hogarth's satire.</p>
-
-<p>Under the shadowy umbrage of his remarkable
-wigs he has introduced several remarkable characters.</p>
-
-<p>Two profiles in the upper row, under the title
-"Episcopal," or "Parsonic," are said to be intended
-for Doctor Warburton, late Bishop of Gloucester, and
-Doctor Samuel Squire, then Bishop of St. David's.</p>
-
-<p>The next row is inscribed "Old Peerian," or
-"Aldermanic;" the first face, in every sense <em>full</em>, is
-said to be meant for Lord Melcombe; but considering
-the class he is placed in, may as well represent some
-sagacious alderman of the day. At the opposite end
-of the same line is that remarkable winged periwig,
-worn by Sir Samuel Fludyer, Lord Mayor of London,
-at the coronation.</p>
-
-<p>A row beneath is made up of the "Lexonic," and
-under it is the "Composite," or half-natural, and the
-"Queerinthian," or Queue de Renard. Even with
-them is a barber's block, crowned with a pair of compasses,
-and marked "Athenian measure." This I
-believe was intended as a caricature of Mr. Stuart,
-and considered as such is an overcharged resemblance.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_287" id="Page_287">[287]</a></span>
-Above the block is a table of references, and facing
-it a scale, divided into nodules, or noddles; nasos, or
-noses; and minutes. To enter fully into the spirit of
-this whimsical print, the spectator must be acquainted
-with the terms of architecture.</p>
-
-<p>At the bottom is a portrait of her Majesty, distinguished
-by the simplicity of her head-dress, and
-five right honourable ladies, whose different ranks are
-pointed out by their coronets, and who all wear the
-<em>tryglyph membretta</em> drop, or neck-lock. Those who
-knew their persons will find no difficulty in ascertaining
-their respective titles. The bed-chamber
-ladies in 1761 were&mdash;Duchess of Ancaster, Duchess
-of Hamilton, Countess of Effingham, Countess of
-Northumberland, Viscountess Weymouth, Viscountess
-Bolingbroke.<a name="FNanchor_213_213" id="FNanchor_213_213"></a><a href="#Footnote_213_213" class="fnanchor">[213]</a> About the centre of the print is the
-following inscription:&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>"Lest the beauty of these capitals should chiefly<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_288" id="Page_288">[288]</a></span>
-depend as usual on the delicacy of the engraving, the
-author hath etched them with his own hand."</p>
-
-<p>They are etched with spirit, and in spelling&mdash;incorrect
-as can be desired by Mr. Hogarth's greatest
-enemy. The word Advertisement is, in latter impressions,
-corrected by an <em>e</em> being inserted on the
-Countess of Northumberland's left shoulder.</p>
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_289" id="Page_289">[289]</a></span></p>
-
-<p class="p2" />
-<h3>THE BENCH.</h3>
-
-<p class="pfs70">"CHARACTER, CARICATURE, AND OUTRE."</p>
-
-<p class="p2" />
-<div class="figcenter">
-<a name="BE" id="BE"></a>
-<img src="images/i_290fp.jpg" width="650" alt="" />
-<div class="caption">THE BENCH.</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class="noindent">"There are hardly any two things more essentially
-different than character and caricature; nevertheless
-they are usually confounded and mistaken
-for each other, on which account this explanation is
-attempted.</p>
-
-<p>"It has ever been allowed, that when a character
-is strongly marked in the living face, it may be considered
-as an index of the mind, to express which
-with any degree of justness in painting, requires the
-utmost efforts of a great master. Now, that which
-has of late years got the name of caricature, is, or
-ought to be, totally divested of every stroke that hath<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_290" id="Page_290">[290]</a></span>
-a tendency to good drawing; it may be said to be a
-species of lines that are produced rather by the hand
-of chance than of skill: for the early scrawlings of a
-child, which do but barely hint an idea of a human
-face, will always be found to be like some person or
-other, and will often form such a comical resemblance,
-as in all probability the most eminent caricatures of
-these times will not be able to equal with design;
-because their ideas of objects are so much the more
-perfect than children's, that they will unavoidably
-introduce some kind of drawing: for all the humorous
-effects of the fashionable manner of caricaturing
-chiefly depend on the surprise we are under at finding
-ourselves caught with any sort of similitude in objects
-absolutely remote in their kind. Let it be observed,
-the more remote in their nature, the greater is the
-excellence of these pieces. As a proof of this, I
-remember a famous caricature of a certain Italian
-singer, that struck at first sight, which consisted only
-of a straight perpendicular line, with a dot over it.
-As to the French word <i lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">outré</i>, it is different from the
-foregoing, and signifies nothing more than the exaggerated
-outline of a figure, all the parts of which may
-be in other respects a perfect and true picture of
-human nature. A giant or a dwarf may be called a
-common man <i lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">outré</i>; so any part, as a nose, or leg,
-made bigger or less than it ought to be, is that part
-<i lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">outré</i>, which is all that is to be understood by this
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_291" id="Page_291">[291]</a></span>word, injudiciously used to the prejudice of character."&mdash;<em>See</em>
-Excess, <cite>Analysis of Beauty</cite>, chap. 6.</p>
-
-<p>The unfinished group of heads in the upper part of
-this print was added by the author in October 1764,
-and was intended as a further illustration of what is
-here said concerning character, caricature, and <i lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">outré</i>.
-He worked upon it the day before his death, which
-happened the 26th of that month.</p>
-
-<p>The system which Mr. Hogarth has laboured to
-establish in the above inscription, and which I think
-the genuine system, he has not illustrated with his
-usual felicity in the print to which it is annexed.</p>
-
-<p>It was published in 1758, and in its first state exhibited
-a view of the Court of Common Pleas, and
-portraits of the four sages who then sat on that Bench.<a name="FNanchor_214_214" id="FNanchor_214_214"></a><a href="#Footnote_214_214" class="fnanchor">[214]</a>
-Lord Chief-Justice Sir John Willes is the principal
-figure; on his right hand is Sir Edward Clive, and on
-his left Mr. Justice Bathurst, and the Honourable
-William Noel.</p>
-
-<p>In this state the print gave character only; for
-though the robes of my Lord Chief-Justice may have
-a shade of the <i lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">outré</i>, they in no degree approach to
-that caricature which the unfinished group added to
-the plate in 1764 was intended to display. Had the
-artist lived to finish them, they might have given
-weight to his assertions, but in their present state do
-not much illuminate his doctrine.</p>
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_292" id="Page_292">[292]</a></span></p>
-<p>The picture, from which each of the prints considerably
-vary, was originally the property of Sir
-George Hay, and is now in the possession of Mr.
-Edwards.</p>
-
-
-<p class="p2" />
-<h3>THE BEGGARS' OPERA.</h3>
-
-<div class="poetry-container"><div class="poetry">
-<p class="verseq">"The charge is prepar'd; the lawyers are met;</p>
-<p class="verse4">The judges all rang'd (a terrible show!)</p>
-<p class="verse">I go undismayed,&mdash;for death is a debt,</p>
-<p class="verse4">A debt on demand,&mdash;so take what I owe.</p>
-<p class="verse">Then farewell, my love,&mdash;dear charmers, adieu;</p>
-<p class="verse">Contented I die,&mdash;'tis the better for you.</p>
-<p class="verse">Here ends all dispute the rest of our lives,</p>
-<p class="verse">For this way at once I please all my wives."</p>
-</div></div>
-
-<p class="p2" />
-<div class="figcenter">
-<a name="BO" id="BO"></a>
-<img src="images/i_292fp.jpg" width="650" alt="" />
-<div class="caption">BEGGARS' OPERA ACT III.</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class="noindent">From the third act of this very instructive and popular
-opera, Mr. Hogarth has selected the subject of this
-print. The scene is laid in Newgate, and the point of
-time seems to be about the fifty-third air, which is
-sung by the elegant and accomplished</p>
-
-
-<p class="p2 pfs70">CAPTAIN MACHEATH.</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container"><div class="poetry">
-<p class="verseq">"Which way shall I turn me? how shall I decide?</p>
-<p class="verse">Wives, the day of our death, are as fond as a bride.</p>
-<p class="verse">One wife is too much for most husbands to hear;</p>
-<p class="verse">But two at a time, there's no mortal can bear.</p>
-<p class="verse">This way, and that way, and which way I will,</p>
-<p class="verse">What would comfort the one, t'other wife would take ill.</p>
-</div></div>
-
-<p class="p2 pfs70">POLLY.</p>
-
-<p class="fs80">"But if his own misfortunes have made him insensible to mine,&mdash;a
-father, sure, will be more compassionate. Dear, dear sir, sink the
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_293" id="Page_293">[293]</a></span>material evidence, and bring him off at his trial,&mdash;Polly upon her
-knees begs it of you.</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container"><div class="poetry">
-<p class="verseq">"When my hero in court appears,</p>
-<p class="verse4">And stands arraign'd for his life,</p>
-<p class="verse">Then think of poor Polly's tears,</p>
-<p class="verse4">For ah! poor Polly's his wife.</p>
-<p class="verse">Like the sailor he holds up his hand,</p>
-<p class="verse4">Distress'd on the dashing wave;</p>
-<p class="verse">To die a dry death at land</p>
-<p class="verse4">Is as bad as a wat'ry grave.</p>
-<p class="verse">And alas, poor Polly!</p>
-<p class="verse4">Alack, and well-a-day!</p>
-<p class="verse">Before I was in love,</p>
-<p class="verse4">Oh! every month was May.</p>
-</div></div>
-
-<p class="p2 pfs70">LUCY.</p>
-
-<p class="fs80">"If Peachum's heart is hardened, sure you, sir, will have more
-compassion on a daughter: I know the evidence is in your power.
-How then can you be a tyrant to me?</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container"><div class="poetry">
-<p class="verseq">"When he holds up his hand, arraign'd for his life,</p>
-<p class="verse">O think of your daughter, and think I'm his wife!</p>
-<p class="verse">What are cannons, or bombs, or clashing of swords?</p>
-<p class="verse">For death is more certain by witnesses' words.</p>
-<p class="verse">Then nail up their lips: that dread thunder allay;</p>
-<p class="verse">And each month of my life will hereafter be May."</p>
-</div></div>
-
-<p>For more of Mr. Gay's moral dialogue I have not
-room.</p>
-
-<p>In the year 1727, it was performed sixty-three
-nights successively, and in the year 1791 retains its
-primitive attractions, and is become what the Drury
-Lane diary styles a stock play.</p>
-
-<p>That it is countenanced by the public is an apology
-for the managers:</p>
-
-<p class="pfs80">"For they who live to please, must please to live;"</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_294" id="Page_294">[294]</a></span></p>
-
-<p class="noindent">but that it should have the sanction of the Chamberlain
-is astonishing.<a name="FNanchor_215_215" id="FNanchor_215_215"></a><a href="#Footnote_215_215" class="fnanchor">[215]</a></p>
-
-<p>We are told in Mr. Boswell's <cite>Johnson</cite>, that when
-Gay showed this opera to his patron, the late worthy
-Duke of Queensberry, his Grace's observation was,
-"This is a very odd thing, Gay; it is either a very
-good thing, or a very bad thing." It proved the
-former, beyond the warmest expectations of the
-author or his friends; though Quin, whose knowledge
-of the public taste cannot be questioned, was so doubtful
-of its success, that he refused to play the part of
-Macheath, which was therefore given to Walker. In
-the same volumes I learn that Dr. Johnson did not
-apprehend that the performance of this opera had the
-pernicious influence which is ascribed to it.<a name="FNanchor_216_216" id="FNanchor_216_216"></a><a href="#Footnote_216_216" class="fnanchor">[216]</a> For the
-Doctor's talents and virtues I have a reverence bordering
-upon idolatry: in questions of morality he can
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_295" id="Page_295">[295]</a></span>seldom be contradicted, and without the strongest conviction
-that in this point he is wrong, I should tremble
-to dissent from his opinion; but my deductions are
-drawn from examples that to me are conclusive.
-With three instances that I had an accidental opportunity
-of seeing, I was very forcibly impressed. Two
-boys, under nineteen years of age, children of worthy
-and respectable parents, fled from their friends, and
-pursued courses that threatened an ignominious termination
-to their lives. After much search they were
-found engaged in midnight depredations, and in
-each of their pockets was the <cite>Beggars' Opera</cite>.</p>
-
-<p>A boy of seventeen, some years since tried at the
-Old Bailey for what there was every reason to think
-his first offence, acknowledged himself so delighted
-with the spirited and heroic character of Macheath,
-that on quitting the theatre he laid out his last guinea
-in the purchase of a pair of pistols, and stopped a
-gentleman on the highway.<a name="FNanchor_217_217" id="FNanchor_217_217"></a><a href="#Footnote_217_217" class="fnanchor">[217]</a></p>
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_296" id="Page_296">[296]</a></span></p>
-<p>The accumulation of similiar facts is not necessary.
-Those who think that lively dialogue, and natural
-though vulgar repartee, can atone for what gives new
-attractions to vice, will, I suppose, continue to sanction
-this performance by attending the representation. If
-anything could balance the baneful influence it is calculated
-to disseminate, Gay must be allowed the praise
-of having attempted to stem Italia's liquid stream,
-which at that time meandered through every alley,
-street, and square in the metropolis; the honour of
-having almost silenced the effeminate song of that
-absurd exotic, Italian opera, which a little previous to
-this time was the grand pursuit of the fashionable
-world. For to the dishonour of true taste, to the disgrace
-of common sense, the discords and jarrings of
-Cuzzoni, Faustina, and Senesino, excited as much attention,
-and were entered into with as much party zeal,
-as were the political contests between Lord Chatham
-and Sir Robert Walpole, or those still more recent,
-between Mr. Charles Fox and Mr. William Pitt.<a name="FNanchor_218_218" id="FNanchor_218_218"></a><a href="#Footnote_218_218" class="fnanchor">[218]</a></p>
-
-<p>The method Gay took to rout this army of unnatural
-auxiliaries does great honour to his generalship.
-A new disorder had been imported from the
-Continent, and like the plague which was wont to be<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_297" id="Page_297">[297]</a></span>
-imported from Turkey, infected our capital. To lay
-an embargo upon sound was impossible; to make
-an echo perform quarantine, ridiculous!&mdash;he took a
-better mode, drew up song against sing-song, and to
-the soft sonnetteering stanza of Italy, opposed the
-nervous old ballad of Britain. He brought into the
-field the whole force of three kingdoms, and took his
-tunes from the most popular songs of the ancient
-bards of England, Scotland, and Wales. <cite>Britons
-strike home</cite> was the word; <cite>Chevy Chase</cite> led the van,
-was followed by a <cite>Soldier and a Sailor</cite> singing <cite>All
-Joy to great Cæsar</cite>, and chorussed by <cite>Shenkin of a
-Noble Race</cite>; when <cite>An old Woman clothed in Gray</cite>,
-with a <cite>Bonny Broom</cite> in her hand, swept the whole
-swarm of buzzing caterpillars <cite>Over the Hills and far
-away</cite>. Goldoni's opera, <span class="smcap">i Viaggiatori Ridicoli
-tornati in Italia</span>,<a name="FNanchor_219_219" id="FNanchor_219_219"></a><a href="#Footnote_219_219" class="fnanchor">[219]</a> was in a degree realized.<a name="FNanchor_220_220" id="FNanchor_220_220"></a><a href="#Footnote_220_220" class="fnanchor">[220]</a></p>
-
-<p>For Italian music, William Hogarth had about as
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_298" id="Page_298">[298]</a></span>much respect as John Gay, and was therefore so well
-pleased with a subject which threw it into ridicule,
-that he not only painted it three times, but has in
-several of his miscellaneous prints made these senseless
-sounds one great object of his satire.</p>
-
-<p>The picture from which this is copied was painted
-in the year 1729, for Mr. Rich of Covent Garden
-Theatre; at the sale of his effects in 1762, it was
-purchased by the late Duke of Leeds,<a name="FNanchor_221_221" id="FNanchor_221_221"></a><a href="#Footnote_221_221" class="fnanchor">[221]</a> and is at this
-time (1806) in the collection of the noble peer who
-now bears that title. When the late Duke permitted
-Messrs. Boydell to copy it, the print was engraved by
-Mr. Blake. To these volumes is annexed an outline
-descriptive of the characters, which it is therefore unnecessary
-to enumerate in this page.<a name="FNanchor_222_222" id="FNanchor_222_222"></a><a href="#Footnote_222_222" class="fnanchor">[222]</a> They afford a
-good example of the dresses, and what was then called
-the dignified manner, of the old school. That any
-woman should admire such a figure as Mr. Walker in
-Macheath, must excite a degree of astonishment; but
-to believe for a moment that so attractive a female as
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_299" id="Page_299">[299]</a></span>Miss Fenton would choose such an Adonis,<a name="FNanchor_223_223" id="FNanchor_223_223"></a><a href="#Footnote_223_223" class="fnanchor">[223]</a> must,
-even in the year 1727, require a very large portion of
-dramatic faith. Her charms have fascinated the
-Duke of Bolton: his eye is fixed on her face, and his
-mind wholly engrossed by the contemplation of that
-beauty which he afterwards made his own. Mr. Rich,
-and Mr. Cock the auctioneer, are properly enough
-represented as totally inattentive to the scene. The
-poet immediately behind them, saturated by public
-approbation, pays no greater regard to the performance
-than is displayed by the manager. It had
-made <em>Gay rich</em>, and <em>Rich gay</em>, and that was sufficient.</p>
-
-<p>As Hogarth was invariably faithful in delineating
-what he saw, I dare believe the characters are represented
-as they were. Considered in that point, without
-regard to other merit, it has quite as much value
-as many groups of portraits which are published in
-this our day, and denominated "Historical Pictures."</p>
-
-<p>In the beginning of the year 1729, Hogarth painted
-for a Sir Archibald Grant two original pictures, "The
-Committee,"<a name="FNanchor_224_224" id="FNanchor_224_224"></a><a href="#Footnote_224_224" class="fnanchor">[224]</a> and the "Beggars' Opera;" but though
-Sir Archibald paid half-price for them at the time he
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_300" id="Page_300">[300]</a></span>gave the order, I cannot positively assert that they
-were ever in his possession, for they afterwards got
-into the hands of Mr. Huggins, at the sale of whose
-effects the latter was purchased by Doctor Monkhouse,
-of Queen's College, Oxford. It has a frame with a
-carved bust of Gay at the top. The late Horace
-Lord Orford had a sketch of a scene in the same
-play.</p>
-
-
-<p class="p2" />
-<h3>THE INDIAN EMPEROR; OR, THE
-CONQUEST OF MEXICO:</h3>
-
-<p class="p2" />
-<div class="figcenter">
-<a name="CM" id="CM"></a>
-<img src="images/i_300fp.jpg" width="650" alt="" />
-<div class="caption">THE CONQUEST OF MEXICO.</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class="center"><em>As performed at Mr. Conduit's, Master of the Mint, before
-the Duke of Cumberland, etc.</em></p>
-
-
-<p class="p2 pfs90">DRAMATIS PERSONÆ.</p>
-
-<p class="pfs90 smcap">Cortez.<span class="pad2">Cydaria.</span><span class="pad2">Almeria.</span><span class="pad2">Alibeck.</span></p>
-
-<p class="pfs90"><span class="smcap">Act. IV.</span>&mdash;<span class="smcap">Scene</span> 4th.&mdash;<em>A Prison.</em></p>
-
-<p class="p2 pfs70">CYDARIA.</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container"><div class="poetry">
-<p class="verseq">"More cruel than the tiger o'er his spoil,</p>
-<p class="verse">And falser than the weeping crocodile;</p>
-<p class="verse">Can you add vanity to guilt, and take</p>
-<p class="verse">A pride to hear the conquests which you make?</p>
-<p class="verse">Go; publish your renown, let it be said</p>
-<p class="verse">You have a woman, and that lov'd betray'd."</p>
-</div></div>
-
-<p class="p2 pfs70">CORTEZ.</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container"><div class="poetry">
-<p class="verseq">"With what injustice is my faith accused!</p>
-<p class="verse">Life! freedom! empire! I at once refus'd;</p>
-<p class="verse">And would again ten thousand times for you."</p>
-</div></div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_301" id="Page_301">[301]</a></span></p>
-
-<p class="p2 pfs70">ALMERIA.</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container"><div class="poetry">
-<p class="verseq">"She'll have too great content to find him true;</p>
-<p class="verse">And therefore since his love is not for me,</p>
-<p class="verse">I'll help to make my rival's misery.</p>
-<p class="verse">Spaniard, I never thought you false before;</p>
-<p class="verse">Can you at once two mistresses adore?</p>
-<p class="verse">Keep the poor soul no longer in suspense,</p>
-<p class="verse">Your change is such, it <ins class="corr" title="Transcriber's Note&mdash;Original text: 'does not not need defence'">does not need defence</ins>."</p>
-</div></div>
-
-<p class="noindent">The scene of Hogarth's last drama was Newgate;
-and in this it is a Mexican prison, where his pigmy
-personages are playing their little parts in one of
-Dryden's heroic tragedies.</p>
-
-<p>That these minor performers should prefer rhyme
-to prose, I can readily conceive&mdash;the jingling of verse
-is a great help to your short memory; but that
-Dryden, "the great high priest of all the Nine,"
-should so far deviate from nature and outrage common
-sense as thus to fetter his dramatic dialogue,
-is to be accounted for on no other principle than
-the vile taste of Charles the Second's vile Court. The
-play is dedicated to the most excellent and most
-illustrious Princess Anne, Duchess of Monmouth and
-Buccleuch, wife to the most illustrious and high-born
-James Duke of Monmouth; and by that dedication<a name="FNanchor_225_225" id="FNanchor_225_225"></a><a href="#Footnote_225_225" class="fnanchor">[225]</a><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_302" id="Page_302">[302]</a></span>
-appears to have been warmly patronized by the most
-eminent persons of wit and honour.</p>
-
-<p>It is a sequel to the <cite>Indian Queen</cite>, written by
-Dryden and Sir Robert Howard, which was published
-two years before. Of this connection between the
-two tragedies, notice was given to the audience by
-printed bills distributed at the door,<a name="FNanchor_226_226" id="FNanchor_226_226"></a><a href="#Footnote_226_226" class="fnanchor">[226]</a>&mdash;an expedient<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_303" id="Page_303">[303]</a></span>
-which the Duke of Buckingham very happily ridicules
-in <cite>The Rehearsal</cite>, when Bayes boasts of the number
-of bills he has printed, to instil into the audience some
-conception of his plot. By the age of the warlike
-William of Cumberland, I conjecture that these embryotic
-heroes and heroines strutted away their little
-hour about the year 1731; and though the play
-which they are enacting is beneath the blazing genius
-of John Dryden, it is well worthy the puny powers
-of these puny performers.<a name="FNanchor_227_227" id="FNanchor_227_227"></a><a href="#Footnote_227_227" class="fnanchor">[227]</a> Lady Sophia Fermor,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_304" id="Page_304">[304]</a></span>
-who plays the part of Almeria, in 1744 married Lord
-Granville, and died in 1750. The prompter was a
-Mr. T. Hill; and though this reverend gentleman is
-in rather too conspicuous a situation, he is not quite
-so obtrusive an object as the prompter at the Opera
-House. The governess playing with one of the children
-was Lady Deloraine. Miss Conduit, who appears as
-Alibeck, was daughter to Catherine, the niece of Sir
-Isaac Newton, and in 1740 married Lord Lymington,
-eldest son to John first Earl of Portsmouth.</p>
-
-<p>The names and additions of three of the auditors are<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_305" id="Page_305">[305]</a></span>
-inserted under the small print. One of the figures
-has a resemblance to the courtly Lord Chesterfield.
-Upon the chimney-piece is the bust of Sir Isaac
-Newton, and it is fair to conjecture that the two
-framed portraits represent Mr. and Mrs. Conduit.</p>
-
-<p>The figure leaning on the back of a chair is said to
-be intended for the Duke of Montagu; and the two in
-the background, for the Duke and Duchess of Richmond.</p>
-
-<p>Hogarth's original painting is the property of
-Lord Holland.</p>
-
-<p class="p4" />
-<div class="figcenter">
-<img src="images/end_305.jpg" alt="" />
-</div>
-
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_306" id="Page_306">[306]</a></span></p>
-
-<h3>THE END.</h3>
-
-<div>
-<img class="drop-cap" src="images/dc_306.jpg" alt="" />
-</div>
-
-<p class="drop-capx">The writer of this catalogue is now come to
-his last chapter, and has before him the
-last plate that Hogarth engraved, which is
-properly denominated the <i lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Finis</i> to that great painter's
-works.</p>
-
-<p>Of the various opinions which the numerous readers
-of these his volumes will form at this his conclusion,
-he can have no certain judgment; but fears that some
-of them may be thus anticipated.</p>
-
-<p>The votary of comedy, who considers Hogarth as a
-mere burlesque painter, with whom he only wishes to
-laugh, will deem this book too grave; while the saturnine
-spirit, that looks at him as a mere sermonic
-moralist, will say it is not grave enough. The man
-who supposes that every character was individual,
-and expects the scandalous chronicle of those who
-were satirized by the artist, will probably complain
-that there is too little anecdote; while he that considers
-this as a frivolous, gossiping, and anecdotish
-age, will say there is too much.</p>
-
-<p>Some will observe that these volumes are too long,
-and in the style of a tired mariner, exult that they see<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_307" id="Page_307">[307]</a></span>
-land. In this their exultation the writer most sincerely
-participates, but at the same time acknowledges
-(so predominant is vanity) that he trusts there are
-who would not regret if the work were still longer,
-who will correct what they find erroneous without
-triumphing in their superior sagacity, and candidly
-forgive the writer's weakness without too much glorying
-in their own strength.</p>
-
-<p>From the pedantic and quizzical connoisseur I expect
-no mercy, but suppose that the book and the
-writer will be arraigned and condemned in manner
-and form following:&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>"I took up these volumes with the expectation of
-seeing all the characters that Hogarth introduced determined,
-and all his variations recorded. With respect
-to the characters, some are mistaken, and others
-are omitted; and as to the variations, few are noticed.<a name="FNanchor_228_228" id="FNanchor_228_228"></a><a href="#Footnote_228_228" class="fnanchor">[228]</a>
-Concerning a multitude of invaluable prints, which
-have singly produced three times as much as the
-volume of his prints in their present state sells for,
-there is not even a catalogue; there are many pages
-of extraneous matter, which I had not patience to
-read; every iota of Hogarth I understood without
-the assistance of this book."</p>
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_308" id="Page_308">[308]</a></span></p>
-<p>With all possible humility the author declareth,
-that for your use or benefit he did not compile it.</p>
-
-<p class="pfs80">"Laugh where you may, be candid where you can."</p>
-
-<p>That you may know some of the characters of
-which the writer is ignorant, he willingly acknowledges;
-that you may guess at many, where he sees
-no ground for conjecture, he cheerfully admits; and
-that both you and himself are very frequently mistaken,
-he firmly believes.</p>
-
-<p>The prints are described as they are copied from
-the present state of the plates, and the material
-alterations incidentally noticed. However great the
-merit of the tankards and teapots, the waiters and
-coats of arms, to reduce them did not come into the
-present plan; to commemorate them was unnecessary.<a name="FNanchor_229_229" id="FNanchor_229_229"></a><a href="#Footnote_229_229" class="fnanchor">[229]</a>
-The author of these volumes, from the day
-he has written man, inspected the works of Hogarth
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_309" id="Page_309">[309]</a></span>with delight, but was not fully conscious of their
-superlative merit until the compilation of these remarks,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_310" id="Page_310">[310]</a></span>
-in the progress of which his duty to the public
-obliged him to examine their design, and endeavour<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_311" id="Page_311">[311]</a></span>
-to illustrate their tendency. In this he has engaged
-with the consciousness that there would be error,&mdash;which
-to such a work is necessarily attached.</p>
-
-<p>To those readers who are not too fastidious to
-peruse it with this allowance, or who have not hitherto
-looked at Hogarth with the attention he merits, it
-is addressed. If it impels them to more minute inspection
-of his works, the purpose is answered.</p>
-
-<p>Yes, great and unrivalled genius! every contemplation
-of thy works must be succeeded by admiration!</p>
-
-
-<p class="p2" />
-<h4>THE BATHOS, OR MANNER OF SINKING IN
-SUBLIME PAINTINGS.<a name="FNanchor_231_231" id="FNanchor_231_231"></a>
- <a href="#Footnote_231_231" class="fnanchor"><span class="xs">[231]</span></a></h4>
-
-<p class="pfs90"><em>Inscribed to the dealers in dark pictures.</em></p>
-
-<p class="p2" />
-<div class="figcenter">
-<a name="BA" id="BA"></a>
-<img src="images/i_312fp.jpg" width="650" alt="" />
-<div class="caption">THE BATHOS.</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class="noindent">In five compartments beneath the title are the following
-inscriptions:&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>In the dexter corner is a pyramidical shell inscribed:
-"The conic form in which the Goddess of
-Beauty was worshipped by the ancients at Paphos
-in the Island of Cyprus. See the medal struck when
-a Roman emperor visited the temple."</p>
-
-<p>"<span lang="la" xml:lang="la">Simulacrum Deæ non effigie humana, continuus
-orbis latiori initio tenuem in ambitum meta modo,
-exsurgens et ratio in obscuro.</span>"&mdash;<span class="smcap">Tacit.</span> <em>Hist.</em> lib. 2.</p>
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_312" id="Page_312">[312]</a></span></p>
-<p>In the sinister corner is a white pyramid, round
-which is twisted the favourite serpentine line inscribed:&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>"A copy of the precise line of Beauty, as it is
-represented on the first explanatory plate of the
-'Analysis of Beauty.'"</p>
-
-<p>"Venus a Paphiis colitur, cujus simulacrum nulli rei
-magis assimile, quam albæ Pyramidi."&mdash;<span class="smcap">Maximus
-Tyrius</span>, <em>Ann.</em> 157.</p>
-
-<p class="p1" />
-<p>"<em>Note.</em>&mdash;The similarity of these two conic figures
-did not occur to the author till two or three years
-after the publication of the <cite>Analysis</cite> in 1754."</p>
-
-<p class="p1" />
-<p>Thus conclude the inscriptions. We will next inquire
-into the motives by which the artist was actuated,
-and the subjects he has intended to satirize in this
-his concluding enigmatical and pun-ical print.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>The labours of this great painter to the passions
-are now at an end; and this is the last page of his
-eventful and instructive histories. Those which he
-had formed into a series, added to the single prints,
-portraits, etc., had become so numerous as to form
-a large volume. A concluding plate seemed necessary;
-and we are told that, a few months before he
-was seized with that malady which deprived society
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_313" id="Page_313">[313]</a></span>of one of its greatest ornaments, he had in contemplation
-a last engraving. After a dinner with a few
-social friends at his own table, enjoying</p>
-
-<p class="pfs80">"The feast of reason, and the flow of soul,"</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">the board crowned with wine, and each glass circulating
-convivial cheerfulness, he was asked, "What
-will be the subject of your next print?" "The end
-of all things!" was his reply. "If that should be the
-case," added one of his friends, "your business will
-be finished, for there will be an end of the painter."
-With a look that conveyed a consciousness of approaching
-dissolution, and a deep sigh, he answered,
-"There will so; and therefore, the sooner my work
-is done the better." With this impulse he next day
-began this plate, and seeming to consider it as a terminus
-to his fame, never turned to the right or left
-until he arrived at the end of his journey.</p>
-
-<p>The aim of this <em>Omega</em> to his own alphabet was
-twofold; to bring together every object which denoted
-the end of time, and throw a ridicule upon the
-bathos and profundity of the ancient masters.</p>
-
-<p>That the bathos is not confined to the poet, but
-hath at sundry times and in divers manners been of
-sovereign use to the painter, I am well convinced.
-My opinion was originally formed upon the inspection
-of many ancient and modern pictures, innumerable
-volumes of ancient and modern prints, and an annual<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_314" id="Page_314">[314]</a></span>
-attendance at the Royal Exhibition: it was confirmed
-by the perusal of some papers on the arts, which
-came into my possession by one of those fortunate
-accidents that happen to few men above once in their
-lives. Walking some years ago through Harp Alley,
-I observed a porter carrying an old trunk without
-a cover, in which was a little picture in a broad and
-deep ebony frame, a few mutilated pamphlets, a parcel
-of prints, and an old manuscript volume bound in
-vellum. He laid down his load at a broker's shop;
-I inspected it, and seeing the book inscribed "Mart.
-Scrib.," purchased the whole lot, took a hackney coach,
-and joyfully conveyed my prize home. Eagerly inspecting
-the contents, I found the picture was Dutch,
-and turned to a tint sombre as the frame: by the
-help of clear water I brought out the colours, and&mdash;</p>
-
-<p class="pfs80">"Oh! Jephtha, judge of Israel,&mdash;what a treasure!"</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">To have painted it, must have been the labour of
-a long life. Such a green stall!&mdash;such a cabbage!&mdash;a
-cauliflower!&mdash;a string of Spanish onions!&mdash;a
-bunch of carrots!&mdash;a lobster!&mdash;a brass kettle!&mdash;and
-a sunflower!&mdash;I never beheld before. So clear!
-transparent! vivid!&mdash;It was forcible as Rembrandt!
-brilliant as Rubens!&mdash;and for finishing&mdash;the most
-accurate works of Denner!&mdash;the most delicate pencilling
-of the Chevalier Vanderweff!&mdash;compared with
-this charming <i lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">tableau</i>, would appear hasty sketches.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_315" id="Page_315">[315]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>The pamphlets were German, and touched of the
-transmutation of metals; to discover which, who
-can calculate the loads of charcoal that have been
-burnt, the retorts that have been burst, or the heads
-that have been turned? That this grand arcanum of
-nature will at some future day be revealed, I have
-no doubt; and there is little reason to fear but the
-benefit of the discovery will be reaped by this island;&mdash;because,
-Britain is highly favoured by the gods;
-and several great calculators have clearly proved,
-that without some such miraculous assistance, Britain
-must be undone by her enormous national debt.</p>
-
-<p>The prints were Flemish; but these subjects are
-foreign to my manuscript. First craving pardon for
-the digression, to that I proceed.</p>
-
-<p>By time<a name="FNanchor_232_232" id="FNanchor_232_232"></a><a href="#Footnote_232_232" class="fnanchor">[232]</a> it was turned to the colour of old parchment,
-but that it was written by the righte cunnynge
-hand of Martinus Scriblerus there can be little doubt.</p>
-
-<p>When he sent some literary memoranda to Arbuthnot,<a name="FNanchor_233_233" id="FNanchor_233_233"></a><a href="#Footnote_233_233" class="fnanchor">[233]</a>
-he recommended to the Doctor "the recovery of
-others which lay straggling about the world."<a name="FNanchor_234_234" id="FNanchor_234_234"></a><a href="#Footnote_234_234" class="fnanchor">[234]</a></p>
-
-<p>Let it be also remembered, that though this prodigy
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_316" id="Page_316">[316]</a></span>of science presented to our English Cervantes
-numerous tracts, he might not think the Doctor
-would have a proper value for those on painting.
-That Martinus was a competent judge of the fine
-arts, is proved by his fifth chapter on Sinking in
-Poetry. Now as the family of the Scribleri, with
-all their alliances and collateral relations, have time
-immemorial been distinguished for the <i lang="la" xml:lang="la">cacoëthes scribendi</i>
-of whatever he was a judge, certes he would
-write, and that which he hath written I have happily
-preserved. A few extracts<a name="FNanchor_235_235" id="FNanchor_235_235"></a><a href="#Footnote_235_235" class="fnanchor">[235]</a> which I have inserted
-will give a general idea of the whole, which is entitled,
-<span class="smcap">The Art of Sinking in Painting</span>; and is thus
-introduced in the <cite>Prolegomena</cite>:&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>"Great and manifold have been the benefits (my
-dear countryman) which poesy hath derived from
-that innumerable army of critics and commentators,
-who fabricated fences to keep her in bounds, and
-bore blazing torches to irradiate her path. Lamentable
-is it to consider how few lights have been held
-out to her sister art; who, notwithstanding an equal
-or prior claim, hath been suffered to wander through
-her dreary night with no other illumination than the
-glow-worm on the bank, or the <i lang="la" xml:lang="la">ignis fatuus</i> in the
-ditches. For the use and service of the poet there is<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_317" id="Page_317">[317]</a></span>
-an ocean of commentary; while the painter hath no
-other stream in which to slake his thirst for instruction
-than that which creeps among the weeds in the
-meadow, or gurgles over the pebbles in the valley.</p>
-
-<p>"From intense application to the mysterious tablets
-of my great ancestors, for ages professors of astrology
-and chemistry in the universities of Germany, I am
-empowered to see by anticipation.</p>
-
-<p>"For me it is decreed to strike the rock of nature
-with the rod of science, and liberate the fountain of
-truth, whose waters shall fertilize this ungenial isle.
-Ye whose well-poised pinions enable you to soar
-above this our terrestrial globe, and dip your pencils
-in the rainbow! come and contemplate the magic
-mirror of Martinus Scriblerus.</p>
-
-<p>"Conscious am I that this our divine muse, who
-hath not unaptly been styled journeywoman to
-Nature, is now in a profound sleep; but in the coming
-century she shall awake from her trance, shake
-the dust from her many-coloured mantle, and dazzle
-the surrounding nations. Blest with the power of
-penetrating the cloud of time, which is impervious to
-vulgar sight, I see, as in a vision, the wonders of
-another age; and should these my lucubrations be
-neglected by my contemporaries, happy am I in the
-confidence that by their posterity they will be properly
-estimated, and sought for as were the Sibyl's
-leaves, regarded as the oracles of Apollo, and con<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_318" id="Page_318">[318]</a></span>sidered
-as the touchstone of true taste. To the age
-of whom they are worthy, and who are worthy of
-them, I dedicate these my labours.</p>
-
-<p>"The few who have written upon the fine arts
-have endeavoured to inculcate simplicity of action,
-anatomical correctness, symmetry of parts, harmony
-of colouring, easy folding of drapery, and due attention
-to the grouping of figures. These rules can only
-be classed among the idle dreams of visionary speculation;
-resign yourselves unto my guidance, and
-listen unto the lessons of truth.</p>
-
-<p>"In every animal there is an original instinct, tending
-towards that for which it was by nature designed.
-In man, there is a natural bias to the bathos; but
-he must be instructed, or rather compelled into any
-relish or taste for what is denominated the sublime.</p>
-
-<p>"To prove this my position, show a collection of
-drawings or paintings to a child: it will be irresistibly
-attracted by glittering colours, forced expressions,
-and grotesque, or what are commonly called caricatured
-countenances. Let the savage, who is not
-vitiated by idle rules, and has never seen painted
-canvas, be taken into a picture-gallery,&mdash;his natural
-taste will lead him to similar objects. What the
-artists call a quiet picture, he will quietly pass; but
-let the figures be crowded, the attitudes extravagant,
-and the colours gaudy,&mdash;his attention and admiration
-are ensured.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_319" id="Page_319">[319]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>"These facts being admitted, and they cannot be
-denied, why should we not take the genuine undebauched
-disposition of man in his original state of
-simplicity, as a better criterion of truth than that
-ideal nature which hath misled many painters and
-writers; of whose fantastic dogmas I cannot too
-strongly caution you to beware. Should you, in the
-course of your early studies, have contracted any of
-this ancient <i lang="la" xml:lang="la">ærugo</i>,&mdash;it is corrosive,&mdash;consider it as
-the dross of science, and scatter it in the air, for with
-my precepts it cannot coalesce. Ideal beauty is a
-childish absurdity. Painting is, or ought to be, an
-imitation of nature; and that can never be a good
-picture which representeth things that never did or
-can exist."</p></div>
-
-<p>After many more pages to the same purport, this
-great philosopher divideth his subject. The table of
-contents to a few of his chapters, which will give a
-general idea of his plan, is hereunto annexed:&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p class="center">"<span class="smcap">Chap. 1.</span>&mdash;<em>Of the Story.</em></p>
-
-<p>"The principal character in your piece should be
-an illustrious person; but as great men may sometimes,
-for their recreation and diversion, or worse
-purposes, be taken up in mean and trivial matters, in
-such situations, it is proved from many right worthy
-examples, they may and ought to be delineated.
-The Emperor Domitian should be represented killing<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_320" id="Page_320">[320]</a></span>
-flies; Nero, playing upon the fiddle; Julius Cæsar,
-kicking a football; and Commodus, at a bull-baiting.</p>
-
-
-<p class="center">"<span class="smcap">Chap. 2.</span>&mdash;<em>Relateth unto the Allegory.</em></p>
-
-<p>"To raise an historical picture above vulgar expression,
-it should be seasoned with allegory, and
-elevated with metaphorical allusions and figures.</p>
-
-
-<p class="center">"<span class="smcap">Chap. 3.</span>&mdash;<em>Of the Time.</em></p>
-
-<p>"In this there should be variety; and if your story
-have not a sufficient number of great and famous
-persons to render it important and interesting, you
-may embellish it with such portraitures as suit your
-purpose. Their not having lived in the same age or
-nation is of little import.</p>
-
-
-<p class="center">"<span class="smcap">Chap. 4.</span>&mdash;<em>Of the Machinery.</em></p>
-
-<p>"The machinery, <i lang="la" xml:lang="la">id est</i>, the celestial and infernal
-powers, must be brought into your picture on every
-great or difficult occasion. This will not only give
-your delineation a classical and learned air, but account
-for any wonderful action which the world
-might think your hero could not perform without
-supernatural assistance.</p>
-
-
-<p class="center">"<span class="smcap">Chap. 5.</span>&mdash;<em>Treateth of the Episode.</em></p>
-
-<p>"To vary the pleasure of the spectator, an historical
-picture should be diversified with an episode; especial<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_321" id="Page_321">[321]</a></span>
-care being taken that it have no congruity with the
-main subject; for the name deriveth from that which
-is superadded to the original plan, and ought no more
-to appear a part of it than an insect appeareth as a
-part of the animal unto which it adhereth.</p>
-
-
-<p class="center">"<span class="smcap">Chap. 6.</span>&mdash;<em>Describeth the nature and end of the
-Hyperbola, or Impossible.</em></p>
-
-<p>"This image is of eminent use in giving a cast of
-grandeur and greatness to what would, without it,
-appear trivial and mean. It excites astonishment;
-and the majority of mankind being most delighted
-with that which is most marvellous, is a good and
-sufficient cause for your works being well strewed
-with wonders."</p></div>
-
-<p>For the contents of eighteen succeeding chapters,
-treating of the cumbrous, the inflated, the glittering,
-the infantine, the pun-ical, the vulgar, and sundry
-other styles, I have not room, but quitting the bathos
-of Martinus Scriblerus, must proceed unto that of
-William Hogarth.</p>
-
-<p>It is well worthy of the title, for a more heterogeneous
-compound of ludicrous and serious objects
-was never displayed in one print.</p>
-
-<p>Some of his images the artist has gleaned from the
-common field of the poor company of punsters, and
-for others hath soared into the lofty regions of mythological
-allegory. He ascends from an inch of candle<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_322" id="Page_322">[322]</a></span>
-setting fire to a print, to the chariot of the sun, which,
-with Apollo Pæan and his three fiery coursers, sinks
-into endless night. Mounts from the cobbler's end,
-twisted round a wooden last, to the world's end, elegantly
-exemplified by a bursting globe on an alehouse
-sign. He has contrasted the worn-out brush
-with the broken crown; and opposed to the empty
-purse a commission of bankrupt, which, sanctioned
-with the great seal of a hero upon a white horse, is
-issued and awarded against Nature,&mdash;by Heaven
-knows who! He has joined the huge cracked bell of
-the cathedral to the broken bottle of the tavern; and
-set in opposition to the mutilated column and capital
-of Ionia, the rope's end of a man-of-war. The bow
-which, drawn by the old English archer, gave force
-fraught with death to the barbed arrow, is unstrung
-and broken. The mutilated firelock, divested of its
-tube, shall no more thin the ranks of contending
-armies. The tottering tower, funeral yew, death's
-head, cross-bones, and "<i lang="la" xml:lang="la">Hic jacet</i>" of a country
-churchyard, are opposed by the hard-worn besom,
-blighted oaks, falling sign-post, and unthatched cottage.
-In what painters call the sky, we have not only
-the son of Latona, but Luna in a veil: in the distance
-a ship is sinking into the bed of the ocean, and a
-gibbet is erected on the shore; to this, in conformity
-with the wise institutions of our polished ancestors,
-and for the luxury of those strong-beaked birds that<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_323" id="Page_323">[323]</a></span>
-feast their young with blood,&mdash;a lord of the creation
-is suspended.<a name="FNanchor_236_236" id="FNanchor_236_236"></a><a href="#Footnote_236_236" class="fnanchor">[236]</a> <span class="smcap">Once</span>,&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container"><div class="poetry">
-<p class="verse6">"On our quick'st decrees</p>
-<p class="verse">The inaudible and noiseless foot of Time</p>
-<p class="verse">Stole, ere we could effect them."</p>
-</div></div>
-
-<p class="noindent"><span class="smcap">Now</span>,&mdash;his scythe, tube, and hour-glass being broken,
-his progress is ended! his sinews are unstrung! his
-hour of dissolution arrived!&mdash;and with those five <em>capital
-letters</em> that have concluded the labours of so many
-learned authors, and which conjoined form the word
-<span class="fs80">FINIS</span>,&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container"><div class="poetry">
-<p class="verse">"He ends his mortal coil, and breathes his last!"</p>
-</div></div>
-
-<p>By his will,&mdash;The great globe itself, and all which
-it inherits, is bequeathed to Chaos,&mdash;appointed sole
-executor;&mdash;and this, his last act, is witnessed by the
-<i lang="la" xml:lang="la">Parcæ</i>.</p>
-
-<p>The print of "The Times," that gave rise to so
-much unmerited abuse of this wonderful painter and
-excellent man, is in a blaze. The palette on which
-he spread the varying tints of many-coloured life&mdash;broken;&mdash;the
-whip of satire, armed with which he</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container"><div class="poetry">
-<p class="verse10">"Dar'd the rage</p>
-<p class="verse">Of the bad men of this degenerate age,"</p>
-</div></div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_324" id="Page_324">[324]</a></span></p>
-
-<p class="noindent">and scourged those that were safe from the law, and
-laughed at the gospel;&mdash;the whip of satire&mdash;divested
-of its lash, lies unheeded on the earth.</p>
-
-<p>The book of Nature, in which he was so deeply
-read, and from whence he drew all his images, is open
-at the last page. The characters that compose his
-pictured tragi-comedies have passed in review before
-us, and with the words engraven on the last leaf of
-that volume which he so well studied, I will conclude
-this&mdash;</p>
-
-
-<p class="center smcap">Exeunt Omnes.</p>
-
-<p class="p2" />
-<div class="figcenter">
-<img src="images/i_324.jpg" width="200" alt="" />
-<div class="caption"><em><span class="smcap">Hogarth's Crest.</span></em></div>
-</div>
-
-
-<div class="footnotes pg-brk">
-<h2>FOOTNOTES:</h2>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_1_1" id="Footnote_1_1"></a><a href="#FNanchor_1_1"><span class="label">[1]</span></a> From some late examples in our courts of justice, I have thought
-it barely possible that this dignified descendant of crowned heads, at
-the same time that he is admiring his own person, may be observing
-the Counsellor's attention to his lady, and hoping that he shall find
-some future opportunity of detecting her infidelity and obtaining a
-divorce. But this is merely conjecture. I wish, for the honour of
-human nature, that there had been no example to justify such a suspicion.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_2_2" id="Footnote_2_2"></a><a href="#FNanchor_2_2"><span class="label">[2]</span></a> The following whimsical imitation of Chaucer was written, I
-believe, by Hermes Harris:&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container"><div class="poetry">
-<p class="verseq">"Right welle my lerned clerkis it is said,</p>
-<p class="verse">That womanhoode for manne his use was made;</p>
-<p class="verse">But naughtie manne liketh not one, or soe,</p>
-<p class="verse">But wisheth aye unthriftilie for mo;</p>
-<p class="verse">And when by holie church to one he's tied,</p>
-<p class="verse">Then for his soule he cannot her abide.</p>
-<p class="verse4">Thus when a dogge first lighteth on a bone,</p>
-<p class="verse">His taile he waggeth,&mdash;gladde thereof y-growne;</p>
-<p class="verse">But if thilke bone untoe his taile thou tie,</p>
-<p class="verse">Pardie, he fearing it, away doth flie."</p>
-</div></div>
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_3_3" id="Footnote_3_3"></a><a href="#FNanchor_3_3"><span class="label">[3]</span></a> Hogarth might intend by this, and the improprieties and violations
-of order in the unfinished building seen out of a window, to hint at the
-absurdities of the then fashionable architect, William Kent. As a
-painter Kent was beneath satire, as an architect he was above it;
-but he was protected by Lord Burlington, patronized by Lord Pembroke,
-and employed by all who aspired to a character for <i lang="it" xml:lang="it">virtu</i>.
-Hogarth saw with disgust bordering upon indignation that his taste in
-one art, modern gardening (of which he was the acknowledged father),
-procured him the reputation of excellence in another, in which he was
-grossly ignorant and glaringly erroneous. In some of the grounds laid
-out by Kent's directions, he realized that Paradise which Milton had
-described; his patrons saw that he could improve nature in their plantations,
-and very kindly gave him credit for a power which he never
-possessed&mdash;that of giving an imitation of nature on his canvas. By the
-Dryades his sacrifice had been accepted; but the offering he laid upon
-the altar sacred to the fine arts was rejected with disdain. It was the
-praise of Hercules that he destroyed monsters and discomfited giants;
-it was the praise of William Kent that he cleared our gardens of their
-representatives. Before his time the plantations round the seats of our
-nobility were a kind of vernal menagerie: the lion shook his shaggy
-mane in yew; the dragon waved his wings in evergreen; and in box,
-the wild boar displayed his bristled neck and tusks terrific. Our
-disciple of true taste cleared away these fantastic forms, and in their
-place gave us nature,&mdash;"nature to advantage dressed." But when
-consulted about interior decorations, his taste evaporated. The heavy
-canopy over the nobleman's head, the ponderous chairs and massy
-frames which decorate the room, are from his designs. In some of
-the old houses of our ancient nobility we see furniture of a similar
-appearance, though the greatest part of it, after passing through the
-purgatory of a broker's shop, has either been placed in very inferior
-situations or consigned to the flames.
-</p>
-<p>
-Of Kent's abilities as a painter the public thought so highly, that he
-was absurdly enough opposed to Sir James Thornhill. This circumstance
-might be one source of Hogarth's dislike; he, however, took an
-early opportunity of showing it, by what is called a "Burlesque of Kent's
-Altarpiece at St. Clement's Church," but which Hogarth declared to be
-a fair delineation of the original. A reduced copy is in vol. iii. of this
-work; see p. 17 of the 2d edition.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_4_4" id="Footnote_4_4"></a><a href="#FNanchor_4_4"><span class="label">[4]</span></a> Some of the portraits of Louis <span class="fs80">XIV.</span> are quite as absurd. We are
-told that he once sent to Rome for Poussin, to paint him in the character
-of Jupiter. This great artist obeyed the summons, and prepared
-his canvas and colours; when, to his extreme astonishment, the monarch
-informed him that, although he was to be delineated as the representative
-of Jove, etiquette did not permit him to appear without his major
-peruke, and he must consequently be so painted. Poussin, not able to
-conceive any way of giving appropriate dignity to the thunderer of
-Olympus with this flowing appendage, declined beginning the picture,
-and returned to Rome without making his <i lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">congé</i>.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_5_5" id="Footnote_5_5"></a><a href="#FNanchor_5_5"><span class="label">[5]</span></a> By the loose negligence of her habit, and some circumstances, I am
-inclined to think the artist intended to represent her as pregnant. It
-has been said that after Baron had finished the plate, Mr. Hogarth
-added a lock of hair with Indian ink, but after a few impressions were
-taken off, inserted this supplemental ornament with the graver. In his
-<cite>Analysis of Beauty</cite>, he makes a remark which in some degree accounts
-for the introduction of this fascinating attraction:&mdash;
-</p>
-<p>
-"It was once the fashion to have two curls of equal size, stuck at the
-same height close upon the forehead, which probably took its rise from
-seeing the pretty effect of curls falling loosely over the face.
-</p>
-<p>
-"A lock of hair falling thus across the temples, and by that means
-breaking the regularity of the oval, has an effect too alluring to be
-strictly decent, as is very well known to the loose and lowest classes of
-women; but being paired in so stiff a manner as they formerly were,
-they lost the desired effect, and ill deserved the name of ornaments."
-</p>
-<p>
-Moralists of different nations have considered hair as calculated to
-entangle hearts, and one of our pious writers of the last century wrote
-a furious treatise on the <em>un</em>loveliness of love-locks.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_6_6" id="Footnote_6_6"></a><a href="#FNanchor_6_6"><span class="label">[6]</span></a> A chair kicked down, an <cite>Essay on Whist</cite>, cards scattered on the
-floor, and the general confusion of everything in the room, seem to
-intimate that this <em>right honourable society</em> were actuated by passions
-somewhat similar to those which inflame the gentlemen in the sixth
-plate of "The Rake's Progress." Though a genuine gamester is not apt
-to lose his presence of mind on slight occasions, yet when a man of
-rank is stripped of sums that will draw into their vortex many anticipated
-years of his revenue, he is liable to lose his temper, and on such
-occasions apt to vent his spleen on inanimate objects. Such things
-sometimes happen even now.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_7_7" id="Footnote_7_7"></a><a href="#FNanchor_7_7"><span class="label">[7]</span></a> Absurd as this may seem, yet until Mr. Wedgwood introduced
-those beautiful Etruscan forms which now decorate the rooms, and form
-the taste of the possessors, these shapeless monsters disgraced the most
-splendid apartments in the metropolis.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_8_8" id="Footnote_8_8"></a><a href="#FNanchor_8_8"><span class="label">[8]</span></a> "Kent was not only consulted for furniture, as frames of pictures,
-glasses, tables, chairs, etc., but for plate, for a barge, for a cradle. So
-impetuous was fashion, that two great ladies prevailed on him to make
-designs for their birthday gowns. The one he dressed in a petticoat
-decorated with columns of the five orders; the other, like a bronze, in
-copper-coloured satin, with ornaments of gold."&mdash;Walpole's <cite>Anecdotes</cite>,
-2d edit., vol. iv. p. 239.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_9_9" id="Footnote_9_9"></a><a href="#FNanchor_9_9"><span class="label">[9]</span></a> This race still roll round the metropolis; and while some put their
-trust in chariots, horses, and impudence, others depend on the credulity
-of his Majesty's liege subjects.
-</p>
-<p>
-The following epitaph was written for one of them:&mdash;
-</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container"><div class="poetry">
-<p class="verse">Beneath lies lean old Fillgrave, once M.D.,</p>
-<p class="verse">Who hunger felt much oft'ner than a fee;</p>
-<p class="verse">These were the last, last words the doctor spoke</p>
-<p class="verse">(And, believe me, sirs, the sentence was no joke),</p>
-<p class="verse">"The world I leave, but can't the world forgive,</p>
-<p class="verse">For by my patients I could never live."</p>
-<p class="verse">In this rejoin'd a friend, "You'd but your due;</p>
-<p class="verse">Your patients, doctor, ne'er could live by you."&mdash;E.</p>
-</div></div>
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_10_10" id="Footnote_10_10"></a><a href="#FNanchor_10_10"><span class="label">[10]</span></a> It is said to have been designed for the once celebrated Betty Careless,
-and the remark is supposed to be countenanced by the initials
-E. C. on her bosom. This woman, by a transmigration as natural as
-is that of the chrysalis, from being one of the most fashionable of the
-Cyprian corps, became keeper of a brothel; and after repeated arrests
-and many imprisonments, was buried from the poorhouse of St. Paul's,
-Covent Garden, April 22, 1752. In many of the elegant Latin odes of
-Loveling her name is immortalized; and of her person and appearance
-Fielding thus speaks in his <cite>Amelia</cite>:&mdash;
-</p>
-<p>
-"I happened in my youth to sit behind two ladies in a side-box at a
-play, where, in a balcony on the opposite side, was placed the inimitable
-Betsy Careless, in company with a young fellow of no very formal or
-indeed sober appearance. One of the ladies, I remember, said to the
-other, 'Did you ever see anything look so modest and so innocent as
-that girl over the way? What pity it is such a creature should be in the
-way of ruin, as I am afraid she is by being alone with that young fellow.'
-</p>
-<p>
-"Now this lady was no bad physiognomist: for it was impossible to
-conceive a greater appearance of modesty, innocence, and simplicity
-than what nature had displayed in the countenance of that girl, and yet,
-all appearances notwithstanding, I myself (remember, critic, it was in
-my youth) had, a few mornings before, seen that very identical picture
-of those engaging qualities in bed with a rake at a bagnio, smoking
-tobacco, drinking punch, talking obscenity, and swearing and cursing
-with all the impudence and impiety of the lowest and most abandoned
-trull of a soldier."
-</p>
-<p>
-Hogarth noticed this woman in a former print: one of the madmen
-in the last plate of "The Rake's Progress" has written "Charming
-Betsy Careless" on the rail of the stairs, and wears her portrait suspended
-to a riband tied round his neck. Mrs. Heywood's <cite>Betsy
-Thoughtless</cite> was in <span class="fs80">MS.</span> entitled <cite>Betsy Careless</cite>; but, from the infamy at
-that time annexed to the name, had a new baptism. There are those
-who say that the letters upon this woman's bosom are not E. C. but
-F. C., and intended to designate Fanny Cock, daughter of Mr. Cock
-the auctioneer, with whom the artist had a casual disagreement. After
-all these conjectures, I think it is probable that these gunpowder initials
-are merely the marks of a woman of the lowest rank and most infamous
-description.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_11_11" id="Footnote_11_11"></a><a href="#FNanchor_11_11"><span class="label">[11]</span></a> From the gallows, immediately over his head, we are led to suppose
-the artist intended to hint that this gentleman died for the good of his
-country; but from the records of some of our mortuary historians, it
-appears that about the time this set of prints were published, a number
-of bodies thus preserved, which had been exsiccated by some mode of
-embalming at present unknown, were discovered in a vault in Whitechapel
-Church.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_12_12" id="Footnote_12_12"></a><a href="#FNanchor_12_12"><span class="label">[12]</span></a> This royal mummy, being once the sole tenant of one of the
-largest pyramids, might be more positively ascertained than any of
-the Cleopatras. It was, however, profanely removed by a wild Arab,
-who, after he had stolen it, sold it to the Consul of Alexandria, by whom
-it was transmitted to England: and a right grave antiquary quotes a
-passage in Sandys' <cite>Travels</cite> to prove its being genuine; where that
-learned and accurate voyager assures us that he saw the sepulchre
-empty, "which agrees exactly," saith he, "with the theft above
-mentioned." He omits to observe that Herodotus tells the same thing
-of it in his time.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_13_13" id="Footnote_13_13"></a><a href="#FNanchor_13_13"><span class="label">[13]</span></a> Carestini.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_14_14" id="Footnote_14_14"></a><a href="#FNanchor_14_14"><span class="label">[14]</span></a> A short time before the publication of these prints, the greatest part
-of our nobility acted as if they had been bitten by a tarantula. The
-sums lavished upon exotic warblers would have supported an army; the
-applause bestowed upon some of them would have turned the brain of a
-saint. It was little short of adoration. Persons of inferior rank caught
-this jingling contagion, and all orders of the people were infected with
-a musical mania, totally foreign to our national taste, and highly dishonourable
-to our national character. In one of Hogarth's former
-prints is a list of the rich presents Signior Farinelli, the Italian singer,
-condescended to accept from the English nobility and gentry for one
-night's performance in the opera of <cite>Artaxerxes!</cite> comprising gold snuff-boxes,
-diamond rings, diamond buckles, etc. That such presents were
-actually made is ascertained by the newspapers of the day.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_15_15" id="Footnote_15_15"></a><a href="#FNanchor_15_15"><span class="label">[15]</span></a> The group of which this is composed is worthy observation. The
-Counsellor is pointing to a friar and a nun who are in close conversation.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_16_16" id="Footnote_16_16"></a><a href="#FNanchor_16_16"><span class="label">[16]</span></a> Mrs. Lane (afterwards Lady Bingley).</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_17_17" id="Footnote_17_17"></a><a href="#FNanchor_17_17"><span class="label">[17]</span></a> Fox Lane, her husband.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_18_18" id="Footnote_18_18"></a><a href="#FNanchor_18_18"><span class="label">[18]</span></a> Weideman.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_19_19" id="Footnote_19_19"></a><a href="#FNanchor_19_19"><span class="label">[19]</span></a> This curious delineation is whimsically placed immediately over the
-head of the Italian.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_20_20" id="Footnote_20_20"></a><a href="#FNanchor_20_20"><span class="label">[20]</span></a> Of the wisdom displayed in this judgment much has been said; I
-have sometimes thought that a decision of the great Frederick of
-Prussia's was equally deserving of record. When a list of criminals,
-who had forfeited their lives by violating the laws of their country, was
-once brought to him to sign, he observed the name of a soldier convicted
-of sacrilege.&mdash;"That a soldier of mine should be guilty of so
-atrocious a crime," said the king, "astonishes and distresses me. I
-will not, however, sign his death-warrant until I have examined him in
-person." The man was accordingly brought into the royal presence,
-and two monks, who were his accusers, declared that he had come
-into their church during the time they were celebrating mass, and
-placed himself under an image of the Virgin Mary, from whose shoes
-he had privately taken two pearl bows, and carried them out of the
-church: they pursued him, and found them in his pocket. The king,
-turning to the criminal, desired to know what he had to say in his
-defence? which was simply this: that he was a disbanded soldier, and
-in great distress for a dinner: that he walked into the churchyard, and
-earnestly prayed to the Virgin Mary that she would put him in the way
-of getting one: that she appeared to him, and told him she heard his
-supplications, and pitied his distress; to relieve which, she begged him
-to accept of some pearls which were on the feet of her image in the
-neighbouring church. When the doors opened, he walked into the
-church and took them out of her shoes, with an intention of converting
-them into money. "This," said the king, "alters the face of the
-business; but tell me, most reverend fathers, for you undoubtedly
-know, is it according to your canons possible that the Virgin could, to
-relieve distress and preserve a life, appear to this poor man in the way
-he describes?"&mdash;"Undoubtedly, my liege, she could, but it is not
-probable that she did." "Is it possible?"&mdash;"Certainly." "Very
-well. I will not let a soldier of mine suffer death upon probabilities.
-He shall be discharged this time; but observe what I say to you,
-young man; if at any future period I find that you accept another
-present from either virgin, saint, or angel, you shall be hanged."</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_21_21" id="Footnote_21_21"></a><a href="#FNanchor_21_21"><span class="label">[21]</span></a> It is said to be copied from the frontispiece to a twopenny history
-of the notified Moll Flanders; but I do not remember seeing it among
-Mr. Gulston's two-and-twenty thousand portraits of illustrious characters.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_22_22" id="Footnote_22_22"></a><a href="#FNanchor_22_22"><span class="label">[22]</span></a> This is one among many proofs of Mr. Hogarth's close attention
-to those little markings which have been generally disregarded by other
-artists. By a fire in the room he fixes the time to be winter,&mdash;a season
-in which those exotic amusements, masquerades, are most frequent in
-the metropolis.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_23_23" id="Footnote_23_23"></a><a href="#FNanchor_23_23"><span class="label">[23]</span></a> "If he do not become a cart as well as another man&mdash;a plague on
-his bringing up!"</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_24_24" id="Footnote_24_24"></a><a href="#FNanchor_24_24"><span class="label">[24]</span></a> A brawn's head, with an orange in its mouth, was at that time a
-fashionable winter dish; and it was a standing dish which might be
-marched from the pantry to the parlour, and give the semblance of
-plenty for forty days. This was perhaps one reason for our votary of
-Mammon making it the leading article in his bill of fare; the rest and
-residue of his feast is made up by a solitary egg.
-</p>
-<p>
-A boiled egg was the usual dinner of Sir Hans Sloane. When he
-once complained to Dr. Mortimer that all his friends had deserted him,
-the Doctor observed that Chelsea was a considerable distance from the
-residence of most of them, and therefore they might be disappointed
-when they came to find he had so slight a dinner. This gentle
-remonstrance put the old Baronet in a rage, and he exclaimed, "Keep
-a table! Invite people to dinner! Would you have me ruin myself?
-Public credit totters already, and if (as has been presaged) there should
-be a national bankruptcy, or a sponge to wipe out the national debt,
-you may yet see me in a workhouse." His landed estate was at that
-time very considerable, and his museum worth much more than the
-twenty thousand pounds which was, however, given for it by Parliament.
-</p>
-<p>
-Scanty as is our citizen's dinner, his table-cloth is ample. The
-founder of Guy's Hospital, which is the first private foundation in the
-world, was not so extravagant. His constant substitute for a table-cloth
-was either a dirty proof sheet of some book or an old newspaper.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_25_25" id="Footnote_25_25"></a><a href="#FNanchor_25_25"><span class="label">[25]</span></a> Let not any censure fall upon Mr. Hogarth for these indelicate
-representations. He evidently means to burlesque the gross and
-ridiculous absurdities of the Dutch painters.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_26_26" id="Footnote_26_26"></a><a href="#FNanchor_26_26"><span class="label">[26]</span></a> These canine unfortunates are not only useful when living, but
-frequently <em>die for the good of mankind</em>. Some have their throats
-cut, to prove the efficacy of a styptic; others are bled to death for a
-philosophical transfusion; and very many resign their breath in the
-receiver of an air-pump. <em>Unhappy Dogs!</em></p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_27_27" id="Footnote_27_27"></a><a href="#FNanchor_27_27"><span class="label">[27]</span></a> "It appears to have been a part of that curse which the disobedience
-of the first man brought upon his posterity, that we were compelled to
-stain our hands in blood, and to subsist on the destruction of other
-animals. But surely, if the necessity of our nature obliges us to deprive
-an innocent being of life, it ought to be done in the easiest and speediest
-manner! and such was the custom among the peculiar people of God.
-What shall we say to that luxury which, for a momentary gratification
-of appetite, condemns a creature endued with feeling, perhaps with
-mind, to languish in torments, and expire by a protracted and cruel
-death?"&mdash;<cite>Sermons by George Gregory, D.D., F.A.S.</cite>, 2d edit. p. 100.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_28_28" id="Footnote_28_28"></a><a href="#FNanchor_28_28"><span class="label">[28]</span></a> How much are we the creatures of habit! Those who would
-shudder at tying a lobster to a wooden spit, and roasting it alive, will
-<em>coolly</em> place a dozen oysters between the bars of a slow fire; and yet
-these oysters, notwithstanding their supposed torpor, may have an equal
-degree of feeling with their armoured brother.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_29_29" id="Footnote_29_29"></a><a href="#FNanchor_29_29"><span class="label">[29]</span></a> I remember once seeing a practical lesson of humanity given to a
-little chimney-sweeper, which had, I dare say, a better effect than a
-volume of ethics. The young soot merchant was seated upon an alehouse
-bench, and had in one hand his brush, and in the other a hot
-buttered roll. While exercising his white masticators with a perseverance
-that evinced the highest gratification, he observed a dog lying on
-the ground near him. The repetition of "Poor fellow, poor fellow,"
-in a good-natured tone, brought the quadruped from his resting-place:
-he wagged his tail, looked up with an eye of humble entreaty, and in
-that universal language which all nations understand, asked for a morsel
-of bread. The sooty tyrant held his remnant of roll towards him; but
-on the dog gently offering to take it, struck him with his brush so violent
-a blow across the nose as nearly broke the bone. A gentleman who,
-unperceived, had been a witness to the whole transaction, put a sixpence
-between his finger and thumb, and beckoned this little monarch of
-May-day to an opposite door. The lad grinned at the silver, but on
-stretching out his hand to receive it, the practical teacher of humanity
-gave him such a rap upon the knuckles with a cane as made them ring.
-His hand tingling with pain, and tears running down his cheeks, he
-asked "What that was for?" "To make you feel," was the reply.
-"How do you like a blow and a disappointment?&mdash;the dog endured
-both! Had you given him a piece of bread, this sixpence should have
-been the reward; you gave him a blow, I will therefore put the money
-in my pocket."</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_30_30" id="Footnote_30_30"></a><a href="#FNanchor_30_30"><span class="label">[30]</span></a> By a strange and inapplicable mistake, this has sometimes been
-written Thieves Inn. It was at that time the longest shilling fare from
-the great fountain of law in Westminster.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_31_31" id="Footnote_31_31"></a><a href="#FNanchor_31_31"><span class="label">[31]</span></a> Though contrary to an express Act of Parliament, this is done
-every day.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_32_32" id="Footnote_32_32"></a><a href="#FNanchor_32_32"><span class="label">[32]</span></a> To the dishonour of our police, the savage custom of driving cattle
-through the streets, even at high noon, is still continued, though scarce
-a week passes without a consequent accident. Might not the Fleet
-Market be removed to Smithfield, and that for live cattle be held in
-the skirts of the city, with a penalty upon any person driving a beast
-through the streets after nine in the morning? This may be impracticable;
-but the number of accidents which happen from the present
-custom show the necessity of some reform.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_33_33" id="Footnote_33_33"></a><a href="#FNanchor_33_33"><span class="label">[33]</span></a> Instead of Amphitheatres, these Gymnasia are now more elegantly
-called Academies.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_34_34" id="Footnote_34_34"></a><a href="#FNanchor_34_34"><span class="label">[34]</span></a> The scene has been said to be laid in Pancras Churchyard: I think
-it bears more resemblance to that of Marybone. The building in the
-background may be on the same eminence where now is the Jew's
-Harp House. This is only conjecture, and as such let it be received.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_35_35" id="Footnote_35_35"></a><a href="#FNanchor_35_35"><span class="label">[35]</span></a> Shakspeare saw this in its true light:
-</p>
-
-<p>"<em>Hamlet.</em> Has this fellow any feeling of his business?
-</p>
-<p>
-"<em>Horatio.</em> Custom hath made it in him a matter of easiness.
-</p>
-<p>
-"<em>Hamlet.</em> Tis e'en so: the hand of little employment hath the
-daintier sense."</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_36_36" id="Footnote_36_36"></a><a href="#FNanchor_36_36"><span class="label">[36]</span></a> The president much resembles old Frieake, who was the master of
-Nourse, to whom the late Mr. Potts was a pupil.
-</p>
-<p>
-Mr. Frieake was originally a member of the Barbers' Company, and
-lived in Salisbury Square. Being desirous of building a carriage on
-the most reasonable terms, he employed a number of journeymen coachmakers
-in his own garret. They performed their task, but found it
-was not possible to get this appendage to modern practice into the
-street by any other means than unroofing the house. This was done,
-and a bricklayer's bill for re-covering the attic storey rendered his <em>saving</em>
-scheme much more expensive than it would have been if he had employed
-the king's coachmaker.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_37_37" id="Footnote_37_37"></a><a href="#FNanchor_37_37"><span class="label">[37]</span></a> The importance of the brewery to the revenue will appear by the
-following statement:&mdash;
-</p>
-<p class="pfs70">MALT AND BREWERS.</p>
-<p>
-The duty on malt from July 5, 1785, to the same day 1786, produced
-a million and a half of money, from a liquor which invigorates
-the bodies of its willing subjects to defend the blessings they enjoy,
-while that from Stygian gin enervates and incapacitates.
-</p>
-<p>
-One of the brewers (or Chevaliers de Malte, as an impertinent Frenchman
-styled Humphrey Parsons, when the King of France inquired
-who he was) within one year contributed fifty thousand pounds to his
-own share. The sight of a great London brewery exhibits a magnificence
-unspeakable. The vessels evince the extent of the trade. Mr.
-Meux of Liquorpond Street can show twenty-four vessels containing
-thirty-five thousand four hundred barrels of wholesome liquor, which
-enables our London porter-drinkers to perform tasks that ten gin-drinkers
-would sink under.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_38_38" id="Footnote_38_38"></a><a href="#FNanchor_38_38"><span class="label">[38]</span></a> This gentleman has been very properly baptized the <em>Herring Poet</em>.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_39_39" id="Footnote_39_39"></a><a href="#FNanchor_39_39"><span class="label">[39]</span></a> It is directed to the Trunkmaker, and contains five enormous folios,
-titled as follows:&mdash;<cite>Lauder on Milton</cite>. <cite>Politics</cite>, vol. 999. <cite>Modern
-Tragedies</cite>, vol. 12. <cite>Hill on the Royal Society</cite>, and <cite>Turnbull on Ancient
-Paintings</cite>. The two last are worthy of a better fate, for one has some
-wit, and the other many sensible remarks.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_40_40" id="Footnote_40_40"></a><a href="#FNanchor_40_40"><span class="label">[40]</span></a> It is not 400 years since a Baron of this realm was tried for high
-crimes and misdemeanours, and one of the chief accusations exhibited
-against him was, that he suffered himself to be carried about his garden
-by two of his own species.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_41_41" id="Footnote_41_41"></a><a href="#FNanchor_41_41"><span class="label">[41]</span></a> It is said, I don't know upon what authority, to be intended as a
-burlesque delineation of John Stephen Liotard, of whom Mr. Walpole
-thus writes in p. 195 of his <cite>Anecdotes</cite>:&mdash;
-</p>
-<p>
-"Devoid of imagination, and one would think of memory, he could
-render nothing but what he saw before his eyes. Freckles, marks of
-the small-pox, everything found its place; not so much from fidelity,
-as because he could not conceive the absence of anything that appeared
-to him."
-</p>
-<p>
-This miserable personage may, however, be only intended to show the
-state of the arts at that time, when an English painter, if not excellent
-in portraits, had no other patronage than that of those gentlemen who
-put out signs of Blue Lions, Green Dragons, and Red Harts. Thanks
-to the talents of our immortal bard, it is not so now. Whether the
-artists of the present day drain copious draughts of humble porter, or
-fill their flagons with Falernian or French wines, let not the memory
-of their patron poet be forgotten. "He merits all their wonder, all
-their praise!"</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_42_42" id="Footnote_42_42"></a><a href="#FNanchor_42_42"><span class="label">[42]</span></a> This wretched being was painted from nature. His cry was, "Buy
-my ballads, and I'll give you a glass of gin for nothing."</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_43_43" id="Footnote_43_43"></a><a href="#FNanchor_43_43"><span class="label">[43]</span></a> This <em>infernal broth</em> is vulgarly called "Strip-me-naked," and has
-almost invariably that effect.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_44_44" id="Footnote_44_44"></a><a href="#FNanchor_44_44"><span class="label">[44]</span></a> This is an unnatural and violent exaggeration.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_45_45" id="Footnote_45_45"></a><a href="#FNanchor_45_45"><span class="label">[45]</span></a> The church in view is <em>St. George's, Bloomsbury</em>. Ralph, in his
-<cite>Critical Review of the Buildings in London</cite>, properly observes that
-"this structure is ridiculous and absurd even to a proverb. That the
-builder mistook whim for genius, and ornament for taste, and that the
-execrable conceit of displaying a statue of the king on the top of it
-excites laughter in the ignorant, and contempt in the judge of architecture."</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_46_46" id="Footnote_46_46"></a><a href="#FNanchor_46_46"><span class="label">[46]</span></a> Two of these harpies have names highly descriptive of their professions&mdash;"Gripe"
-and "Killman."</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_47_47" id="Footnote_47_47"></a><a href="#FNanchor_47_47"><span class="label">[47]</span></a> I hope I shall not be censured for inserting a quotation from Fingal
-as the motto to an imitation of Rembrandt. Both poet and painter
-delighted in darkness, and each of them sometimes introduced a sublime
-and majestic figure, which beamed through the gloom "like the
-new moon seen through a gathered mist, when the sky pours down its
-flaky snow, and the world is silent and dark."</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_48_48" id="Footnote_48_48"></a><a href="#FNanchor_48_48"><span class="label">[48]</span></a> This little winged periwinkle is engraven in a very different style
-from the rest of the plate, much of which is a sort of <em>aquæ</em> tint. Many
-impressions were taken off without this figure.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_49_49" id="Footnote_49_49"></a><a href="#FNanchor_49_49"><span class="label">[49]</span></a> On the blade is engraven a dagger, the arms of our metropolis.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_50_50" id="Footnote_50_50"></a><a href="#FNanchor_50_50"><span class="label">[50]</span></a> This has been generally thought intended for a portrait of Hume
-Campbell, who, like some of his boisterous brethren of the present day,
-distinguished himself by a sort of savage elocution more consonant to
-Billingsgate than a court of law. Others have said it was designed for
-Doctor William King, Principal of St. Mary Hall, Oxford, and in
-proof of their assertion refer to an ascertained portrait in Worlidge's
-view of "Lord Westmoreland's Installation," 1761, to which it has a
-striking resemblance.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_51_51" id="Footnote_51_51"></a><a href="#FNanchor_51_51"><span class="label">[51]</span></a> On the scraps are inscribed, "We have found this man a pestilent
-fellow, a mover of sedition among the Jews, ringleader of the sect," etc.
-etc. etc.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_52_52" id="Footnote_52_52"></a><a href="#FNanchor_52_52"><span class="label">[52]</span></a> While the plate remained in the hands of Mrs. Hogarth impressions
-were sold at that price, but were afterwards reduced to three shillings.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_53_53" id="Footnote_53_53"></a><a href="#FNanchor_53_53"><span class="label">[53]</span></a> With each infant was then sent some little memorial by which it
-might be known at a future day. The following lines were written by
-an unfortunate widow, and pinned to the breast of a child who was
-received into the hospital:
-</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container"><div class="poetry">
-<p class="verseq">"Go, gentle babe, thy future life be spent</p>
-<p class="verse">In virtuous purity and calm content;</p>
-<p class="verse">Life's sunshine bless thee, and no anxious care</p>
-<p class="verse">Sit on thy brow, and draw the falling tear;</p>
-<p class="verse">Thy country's grateful servant may'st thou prove,</p>
-<p class="verse">And all thy life be happiness and love."</p>
-</div></div>
-
-<p>
-Some fifteen or sixteen years ago, a person of respectable appearance
-went to the hospital, and requested to see the chapel, great room, etc.
-He then desired to speak with the treasurer, to whom he presented a
-ten-pound bank note, expressing a wish that it might be recorded as a
-small but grateful memorial from the first orphan who was apprenticed
-by the charity. He added, "I was that orphan, and in consequence
-of the education I here received, have had the power of acquiring an
-independence with integrity and honour."</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_54_54" id="Footnote_54_54"></a><a href="#FNanchor_54_54"><span class="label">[54]</span></a> Several other pictures were presented to the hospital by the few
-eminent painters who then lived in London.
-</p>
-<p>
-"The donations in painting which several artists presented to the
-Foundling Hospital were among the first objects of this nature which
-engaged the public attention. The artists observing the effects that
-these paintings produced, came, in the year 1760, to a resolution to
-try the fate of a public exhibition of their works. This effort had its
-desired effect. The public were entertained, and the artists were excited
-to emulation."&mdash;<cite>Strange's Inquiry into the Rise and Establishment
-of the Royal Academy</cite>, p. 63.
-</p>
-<p>
-This gives Hogarth a right to be classed, if not among those who
-were founders of the Royal Academy, as one of the first causes of its
-establishment.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_55_55" id="Footnote_55_55"></a><a href="#FNanchor_55_55"><span class="label">[55]</span></a> Be this as it may, certain it is that the boy, who was afterwards
-so great a Jewish legislator, bears a very strong resemblance to the
-Egyptian princess. That the artist meant by this family likeness to
-hint that he was of royal descent, I do not presume to assert.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_56_56" id="Footnote_56_56"></a><a href="#FNanchor_56_56"><span class="label">[56]</span></a> The head is said to be copied from a youth of the name of Seaton.
-The attitude and general air very much resemble that of Delilah, in a
-picture painted by Vandyke, of Samson seized by the Philistines, now
-in the Emperor's gallery at Vienna.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_57_57" id="Footnote_57_57"></a><a href="#FNanchor_57_57"><span class="label">[57]</span></a>
-These prints were promised to the subscribers <ins class="corr" title="Transcriber's Note&mdash;Original text: 'sooner than hey'">sooner than they</ins>
-could be completed; and in consequence of their being delayed, the
-following advertisement was inserted in the <cite>Public Advertiser</cite> of February
-28, 1757:&mdash;
-</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>"Mr. Hogarth is obliged to inform the subscribers to his Election
-prints that the three last cannot be published till about Christmas next,
-which delay is entirely owing to the difficulties he has met with to procure
-able hands to engrave the plates: but that he neither may have
-any more apologies to make on such an account, nor trespass any
-further on the indulgence of the public by increasing a collection already
-sufficiently large, he intends to employ the rest of his time in portrait-painting;
-chiefly this notice seems more necessary, as several spurious
-and scandalous prints have lately been published in his name," etc.</p></div>
-
-<p>
-This fretful appeal must have been written under the influence of
-momentary spleen, which might possibly originate in his coadjutor's
-disappointing, and by that means forcing him to violate his engagements
-with the public. There is no other apology for his indulging a
-thought of quitting that walk in which he indisputably led, for another
-in which he must not only follow, but be far behind some of his contemporaries.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_58_58" id="Footnote_58_58"></a><a href="#FNanchor_58_58"><span class="label">[58]</span></a> Sir George Saville saw this in its true light. One of the supporters
-of the Bill of Rights <ins class="corr" title="Transcriber's Note&mdash;Original text: 'being desious'">being desirous</ins> of introducing Sir George's name
-among the members of the society, made application to the worthy
-Baronet for his permission to propose him. Sir George declined the
-honour, and pleaded his engagements being so numerous that he had
-not time to attend, etc. etc. "We do not expect your attendance,"
-replied his friend; "we do not expect your constant attendance; but
-the sanction of your name would be a tower of strength to the society;
-and as you see by the public prints, the manner we conduct ourselves,
-and the business we do, you must approve, I think you cannot refuse us
-your name." "I do not," said Sir George, "make any objection to
-your conduct, which I have thought very regular and systematic, but I
-really dislike the title you have adopted; I observe that you meet, read
-a string of observations, and then make a motion for adjourning to
-dinner in the next room; there each man drinks his two bottles to most
-patriotic and constitutional toasts. In the next paper appear advertisements,
-that on the following Monday the supporters of the Bill of
-Rights will meet again. Dinner on table precisely at four o'clock. You
-dine, and drink your wine; your secretary gives us the same information
-in the succeeding prints, and again adds, that&mdash;dinner will be on
-the table precisely at four o'clock. All these circumstances induce me
-to think you should alter your title; instead of 'Supporters of the Bill
-of Rights,' call yourselves what you really are, 'Supporters of the Bill
-of Fare!'"</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_59_59" id="Footnote_59_59"></a><a href="#FNanchor_59_59"><span class="label">[59]</span></a> This has been pronounced, I know not upon what authority, to be
-intended for the late Thomas Potter, Esq.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_60_60" id="Footnote_60_60"></a><a href="#FNanchor_60_60"><span class="label">[60]</span></a> In page 21 of a quarto pamphlet published in 1755, and entitled,
-"The Last Blow, or an unanswerable vindication of the society of Exeter
-College, being a reply to the Vice-Chancellor, Dr. King, and the writers
-of the <cite>London Evening Post</cite>," is the following paragraph:&mdash;
-</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>"The next character to whose merits we would do justice is the
-Rev. Dr. C&mdash;ss&mdash;t (Cosserat). But as it is very difficult to delineate
-this fellow in colours sufficiently strong and lively, it is fortunate for us
-and the Doctor that Hogarth has undertaken the task. In the print of
-'An Election Entertainment,' the public will see the Doctor represented
-sitting among the freeholders, and zealously eating and drinking for the
-sake of the new interest. His venerable and humane aspect will at
-once bespeak the dignity and benevolence of his heart. Never did
-aldermen at Guildhall devour custard with half such an appearance of
-love to his country, or swallow ale with so much the air of a patriot.
-These circumstances the pencil of Hogarth will undoubtedly make
-manifest; but it is much to be lamented that his words also cannot
-appear in this print, and that the artist cannot delineate that persuasive
-flow of eloquence which could prevail upon copyholders to abjure their
-base tenures and swear themselves freeholders. But this oratory (far
-different from the balderdash of Tully and Doctor King, concerning
-liberty and our country), as the genius of mild ale alone could inspire,
-this fellow alone could deliver."</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_61_61" id="Footnote_61_61"></a><a href="#FNanchor_61_61"><span class="label">[61]</span></a> I think it is recorded in Mr. Joseph Miller's <cite>Reports</cite>, that our
-British Solomon often asserted that scratching was too great a luxury
-for a subject to enjoy.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_62_62" id="Footnote_62_62"></a><a href="#FNanchor_62_62"><span class="label">[62]</span></a> This woman was remarkable for performing at fairs, country hops,
-etc. in the neighbourhood of Oxford, and known by the name of
-Fiddling Nan.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_63_63" id="Footnote_63_63"></a><a href="#FNanchor_63_63"><span class="label">[63]</span></a> This is a portrait of the present Sir John Parnell, nephew to the
-poet. He was introduced into this print by his own request, declaring
-at the same time that, from his being so generally known in Ireland, his
-face would help the sale of the engraving.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_64_64" id="Footnote_64_64"></a><a href="#FNanchor_64_64"><span class="label">[64]</span></a> It is supposed to be the portrait of an Oxford bruiser who went by
-the name of Teague Carter.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_65_65" id="Footnote_65_65"></a><a href="#FNanchor_65_65"><span class="label">[65]</span></a> A mashing-tub seems a sufficiently capacious vessel, but sinks to
-nothing when compared with a bowl which, it is recorded, was filled
-with punch on the 15th of October 1694, at the expense of Admiral
-Russel. The Admiral's punch was made in a fountain situated in the
-centre of a large garden, the terminus to four long gravel walks, canopied
-with orange and lemon trees. In each walk was a table the length of
-the avenue, covered with a cold collation, consisting of every luxury
-which the season produced; and in the basin of the fountain, which
-the gallant seaman chose to call a little basin, for the entertainment of a
-few friends, were the following ingredients:&mdash;Four hogsheads of brandy,
-eight hogsheads of water, twenty-five thousand lemons, twenty gallons
-of lime juice, thirteen hundredweight of fine Lisbon sugar, five pounds of
-grated nutmegs, three hundred toasted biscuits, and lastly, a pipe of dry
-mountain Malaga. Over the fountain was erected a large canopy to keep
-off the rain, and in a little boat, built for the purpose, a boy belonging
-to the fleet rowed round the basin, and served this cordial beverage to
-the company. More than six thousand men partook of this mighty bowl.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_66_66" id="Footnote_66_66"></a><a href="#FNanchor_66_66"><span class="label">[66]</span></a> This alludes to the alteration of the style in the year 1752, a measure
-which gave great umbrage, and excited a violent clamour among the
-advocates for old customs and adherents to ancient forms.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_67_67" id="Footnote_67_67"></a><a href="#FNanchor_67_67"><span class="label">[67]</span></a> Kirton was a tobacconist in Fleet Street, but injured his circumstances
-and destroyed his constitution by his active zeal in the Oxfordshire
-election of 1754.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_68_68" id="Footnote_68_68"></a><a href="#FNanchor_68_68"><span class="label">[68]</span></a> This is said to be intended for the late Duke of Newcastle, his
-Grace having exerted all his influence in support of the Naturalization
-Bill: the nose of the effigy gives some probability to the conjecture.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_69_69" id="Footnote_69_69"></a><a href="#FNanchor_69_69"><span class="label">[69]</span></a> Under the portrait of a Mr. Cholmondeley of Vale Royal, in
-Cheshire, engraved about the same time with these prints, are the
-following quaint lines:
-</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container"><div class="poetry">
-<p class="verseq">"In this plain garb a senator is shown,</p>
-<p class="verse">Who never bought a vote, nor sold his own."</p>
-</div></div>
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_70_70" id="Footnote_70_70"></a><a href="#FNanchor_70_70"><span class="label">[70]</span></a> This print undoubtedly gave the hint for a transaction in which
-Punch was made the principal agent at a late Shaftesbury election.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_71_71" id="Footnote_71_71"></a><a href="#FNanchor_71_71"><span class="label">[71]</span></a> By the condescending humility of men of high rank, and the aspiring
-ambition of men of no rank, they to all appearance become equal
-at every general election. The following is one among the few instances
-of an independent spirit in a candidate's address:&mdash;
-</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p class="center">"<span class="smcap">To the Gentlemen, Clergy, and Freeholders of the
-County of York.</span></p>
-
-<p>
-"<span class="smcap">Gentlemen</span>,&mdash;I have had the honour to represent the county of
-York in three successive Parliaments: I have been diligent in my
-attendance, and have performed my duty with a clear and unbiassed
-conscience. I have now an opposition declared against me, for what
-reasons I do not know, except that I am not disposed to obey the
-dictates of the associators at York. I do not wish to serve you upon
-such terms. I will never go to Parliament in fetters; nor did I, nor
-ever will I disguise my principles, which all go to the support of our
-excellent constitution in Church and State. I avow myself an enemy to
-tumults, sedition, and rebellion, and will never support any but a British
-interest. Consistently with that, I am a friend to the people, and am
-determined to preserve my independency, yielding neither to any influence
-of ministers, nor to any clamours of a faction.
-</p>
-<p>
-"Upon these principles I shall esteem it a high honour to be returned
-for this great county, and shall be thankful for your support.&mdash;I am,
-gentlemen, etc.,
-</p>
-
-<p class="right">"<span class="smcap">Edwin Lascelles</span>.</p>
-
-<p>"<em>September 12, 1780.</em>"</p></div>
-
-<p>
-In Mr. Edmund Burke's speech to the electors of Bristol, on the 3d
-of November 1774, he gave such cogent reasons for not signing any
-engagement to obey in all cases the instructions of his constituents, that
-I cannot resist the temptation of inserting an extract, for the contemplation
-of those who are advocates of a contrary system:&mdash;
-</p>
-<p>
-"Certainly, gentlemen, it ought to be the happiness and glory of a
-representative to live in the strictest union, the closest correspondence,
-and the most unreserved communication with his constituents. Their
-wishes ought to have great weight with him; their opinion high respect;
-their business unremitted attention. It is his duty to sacrifice his repose,
-his pleasures, his satisfaction to theirs; and above all, ever and in all
-cases to prefer their interest to his own. But his unbiassed opinion,
-his mature judgment, his enlightened conscience, he ought not to
-sacrifice to you, to any men, or to any set of men living. These he
-does not derive from your pleasure; no, nor from the law and the constitution.
-They are a trust from Providence, for the abuse of which
-he is deeply answerable. Your representative owes you not only his
-industry, but his judgment; and he betrays instead of serving you, if he
-sacrifices it to your opinion.
-</p>
-<p>
-"My worthy colleague says his will ought to be subservient to yours.
-If that be all, the thing is innocent. If government were a matter of
-will upon any side, yours, without question, ought to be superior. But
-government and legislation are matters of reason and judgment, and not
-of inclination; and what sort of reason is that in which the determination
-precedes the discussion, in which one set of men deliberate and
-another decide, and where those who form the conclusion are three
-hundred miles distant from those who hear the argument?
-</p>
-<p>
-"To deliver an opinion is the right of all men; that of constituents
-is a weighty and respectable opinion, which a representative ought
-always to rejoice to hear, and which he ought always most seriously to
-consider. But authoritative instructions; mandates issued, which the
-member is bound blindly and implicitly to obey, to vote, and to argue
-for, though contrary to the clearest conviction of his judgment and conscience;
-these are things utterly unknown to the laws of the land,
-which arise from a fundamental mistake of the whole order and tenor
-of our constitution.
-</p>
-<p>
-"Parliament is not a congress of ambassadors from different and
-hostile interests; which interests each must maintain, as an agent and
-advocate against other agents and advocates; but Parliament is a deliberative
-assembly of one nation, with one interest, that of the whole;
-where not local purposes, not local prejudices ought to guide, but the
-general good resulting from the general reason of the whole. You
-choose a member, indeed; but when you have chosen him, he is not a
-member of Bristol, but he is a member of Parliament. If the local
-constituent should have an interest, or should form an hasty opinion,
-evidently opposite to the real good of the rest of the community,
-the member of that place ought to be as far as any other from
-any endeavour to give it effect."</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_72_72" id="Footnote_72_72"></a><a href="#FNanchor_72_72"><span class="label">[72]</span></a> In the year 1739 Admiral Vernon took Portobello with six ships
-only. The public gratitude to him was boundless: he was sung in
-ballads; at the ensuing general election in 1741 he was returned for
-three different corporations; but above all, his portrait covered every
-signpost; and he may be, figuratively, said to have sold the ale, beer,
-and purl of all England for six years.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_73_73" id="Footnote_73_73"></a><a href="#FNanchor_73_73"><span class="label">[73]</span></a> This sign has a very whimsical appearance: it represents our merry
-monarch in a great tree, enveloped in a black wig, decorated with a
-point lace cravat, and environed with three crowns. Two Parliamentary
-troopers, riding beneath the branches, do not perceive that this
-faithless "Defender of the Faith," and so forth, is immediately above
-them. This curious delineation is evidently copied from some country
-sign, and gives a very exact representation of one I remember to have
-seen in a village in Shropshire, with the following <em>poetical</em> inscription:&mdash;
-</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container"><div class="poetry">
-<p class="verseq">"This oak, the glory of the wood, may well be called a royal thing,</p>
-<p class="verse">For once upon its branches there perched a great king;</p>
-<p class="verse">And while the king was perched upon the branches so high,</p>
-<p class="verse">The Roundhead rebels under him they all passed by."</p>
-</div></div>
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_74_74" id="Footnote_74_74"></a><a href="#FNanchor_74_74"><span class="label">[74]</span></a> When Ware the architect was told of this piece of satire, he said
-the artist must be a very foolish fellow; for if he had painted the coachman
-as a shorter man, or made him stoop, he might have driven
-through the gateway with his head upon his shoulders.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_75_75" id="Footnote_75_75"></a><a href="#FNanchor_75_75"><span class="label">[75]</span></a> John Shoreditch, in the reign of Edward <span class="fs80">III.</span>, sued the county of
-Middlesex (for which he was returned to Parliament) to recover his
-wages. In some letters from the dead to the living, published about
-the year 1761, one signed with his name concludes as follows:
-</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>"If I was now upon earth&mdash;either nobleman or commoner&mdash;I
-should choose peace and quiet, both public and private: I should be
-happy in preserving religion and morality among my countrymen, instead
-of suborning them to take the oath falsely about bribery and
-corruption; debauching their minds, by giving them money that is of
-no use to their families, and keeping them in continual drunkenness,
-that renders them incapable of serving themselves or their country.
-</p>
-<p>
-"To this I attribute the loss of that which was common in my time,
-but in yours is found only in romances and novels&mdash;I mean simplicity
-of manners among the country people. Rustic innocence was then as
-common among the men as among the women; but there is scarce any
-mode of vice or folly which is not at this period equally known and
-practised by both sexes; and in the most obscure villages to as great a
-degree as in the most polished cities. Let us consider that a million of
-money was spent in treats and bribery at the last general election; and
-if we take into the calculation the contested elections, for some of which
-there were three or four candidates, and the money that is spent by their
-friends on these occasions, we shall not find the computation too high.
-What place, then, will not the influence of this immense sum extend to?
-Not even the smallest hamlet can escape; and you may as well look
-for purity of manners, innocence and simplicity, among the Capuans of
-old, or in your Covent Garden, as in any place that an election guinea
-has found its way to.&mdash;I am, etc."</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_76_76" id="Footnote_76_76"></a><a href="#FNanchor_76_76"><span class="label">[76]</span></a> I am tasteless enough to prefer this to Garrick between Tragedy and
-Comedy. From Hogarth the hint was indisputably taken; but exquisite
-as is the face of Thalia, the countenance of the actor, from the contention
-of two passions, has assumed a kind of idiotic stare, of which our
-honest farmer has not an iota. In the true spirit of Falstaff, he says,
-or seems to say, "D'ye think I do not know ye? Ha! ha! ha!
-he! he! he!!"</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_77_77" id="Footnote_77_77"></a><a href="#FNanchor_77_77"><span class="label">[77]</span></a> Swift boasted that he made it a rule never to give his voice for the
-appointment of any man to any situation for which that man was not
-better qualified than his opponent. Being once applied to for his
-interest in the recommendation of a curate, because he was a very good
-sort of man, though a very vile preacher, he said he would willingly, if
-in his power, recommend him to be a bishop, because that was a
-business in which preaching was not wanted, but in a curate it was
-wanted every week. Being once asked by one of his parishioners
-which of two candidates he would advise him to vote for as a Parliament
-man, in a warmly contested Irish election, Swift desired he would
-first consider what was the business of a Parliament man; and secondly,
-which of the parties was best qualified for that business; and then he
-would want no advice. If your vote, added he, could make a lord
-or a duke, as they are people who need not do any business at all,
-you might toss up a halfpenny, and vote for the man who came up
-heads.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_78_78" id="Footnote_78_78"></a><a href="#FNanchor_78_78"><span class="label">[78]</span></a> By a letter we see out of his pocket, this appears to be Doctor
-Shebbeare, who was put on the pillory, and confined in prison; not for
-writing in the cause of his country, but for printing and publishing the
-sixth letter to the people of England, in which he most impudently
-and audaciously abuses George the First and the present royal family.
-The Doctor frequently said in a public coffeehouse, that he would have
-a pillory or a pension. In each of these points he was gratified; Lord
-Mansfield complimented him with the first, and Lord Bute rewarded
-him with the second. The honour he enjoyed long ago, the emolument
-he died in the receipt of a very few years since.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_79_79" id="Footnote_79_79"></a><a href="#FNanchor_79_79"><span class="label">[79]</span></a> The late Doctor Barrowby persuaded a dying man, that being much
-better he might venture with him in his chariot to the hustings in
-Covent Garden, to poll for Sir George Vandeput. The unhappy voter
-took his physician's advice, and in less than an hour after his return&mdash;expired.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_80_80" id="Footnote_80_80"></a><a href="#FNanchor_80_80"><span class="label">[80]</span></a> This sagacious-looking gentleman is said to be intended as a
-portraiture of the late Bub Doddington, afterwards Lord Melcombe.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_81_81" id="Footnote_81_81"></a><a href="#FNanchor_81_81"><span class="label">[81]</span></a> It has been thought that this carries some allusion to a circumstance
-which happened at the contested Oxfordshire election in 1754, when an
-outrageous mob, in the old interest, surrounded a post-chaise and
-attempted to throw it into the river; but Captain T&mdash;&mdash;, who was
-in the carriage, shot a chimney-sweeper that was a ringleader in the
-assault, and his followers dispersed.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_82_82" id="Footnote_82_82"></a><a href="#FNanchor_82_82"><span class="label">[82]</span></a> About the year 1740, when party disputes ran very high, a gentleman
-of superior talents and undeviating integrity offered himself as a
-candidate for a town in the West of England. The first person whose
-vote he solicited asked him if he was a Whig or a Tory? "Neither,"
-was the reply; "I profess myself a moderate man, and when administration
-act right, will vote with them,&mdash;when wrong, against them."
-"And be these really thy principles!" said the elector; "be these really
-thy principles! Then thou shalt not have my vote; but I'll give thee
-a piece of advice. Thou seest my door; it leads into the street, the
-right-hand side of which is for the Tories, the left for the Whigs; and
-for a cold-blooded moderate man like thee, there is the kennel, and
-in it I advise thee to walk, for thee be'st not decided enough for any
-other situation."</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_83_83" id="Footnote_83_83"></a><a href="#FNanchor_83_83"><span class="label">[83]</span></a> This must indisputably be considered as the lawyer's mansion, not
-merely because it has a better appearance than any house we have seen
-in the foregoing prints, but because a parchment label, which hangs out
-of an upper window where a clerk is writing, is inscribed "Indintur."
-Had the artist thought it worth while to have consulted Master Henry
-Dilworth, or any other eminent schoolmaster, this orthography had
-been corrected.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_84_84" id="Footnote_84_84"></a><a href="#FNanchor_84_84"><span class="label">[84]</span></a> When many of those gentleman who had been very active in the
-Revolution, and materially contributed to the success of our great
-deliverer, applied to a nobleman high in office for the first places in
-the State, he answered their requests by referring them to the Roman
-history: "There," says he, "you will find that geese twice saved the
-Capitol; but I never heard that those geese were made Consuls."</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_85_85" id="Footnote_85_85"></a><a href="#FNanchor_85_85"><span class="label">[85]</span></a> "Vermin" is a coarse phrase, but I think in a degree appropriate.
-How similar are the effects attendant on a swarm of pettifogging
-lawyers settling in a country town, to those resulting from a swarm of
-noxious and destructive insects settling in a garden!</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_86_86" id="Footnote_86_86"></a><a href="#FNanchor_86_86"><span class="label">[86]</span></a> A nobleman, whose name it is not necessary to record, was so
-struck with the wit of this motto, that he had it inscribed upon a common
-eight-day clock.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_87_87" id="Footnote_87_87"></a><a href="#FNanchor_87_87"><span class="label">[87]</span></a> The life of Andrew Marvel forms a fine contrast to the life of a
-modern patriot. He was the son of a clergyman who resided at
-Kingston-upon-Hull, in Yorkshire, at which town he was born in the
-year 1624. His first appearance in public business was as an assistant
-to John Milton, when that inspired poet was Latin secretary to the
-Protector. A little before the Restoration he was chosen representative
-for his native town, and afterwards re-elected for the same place, and
-had a seat in that Parliament which began at Westminster, May 8,
-1661. In this station he discharged his trust with the utmost fidelity,
-and always displayed a particular regard for those by whom he was
-elected; for he regularly sent the particulars of every proceeding in the
-House to the heads of the town which he represented, and to these
-accounts always joined his own opinion. This gained so much upon
-their affections, that they allowed him an honourable pension during
-the whole time he sat in Parliament, which was until his death. By
-his actions and writings he rendered himself obnoxious to the ruling
-powers; notwithstanding which, Charles the Second much delighted in
-his company. Having one evening passed some hours with this good-humoured
-monarch, his Majesty next morning sent Lord Treasurer
-Danby to find out his lodgings. Mr. Marvel's apartments were up two
-pair of stairs, in a little court in the Strand, where he was writing when
-the Lord Treasurer rather abruptly opened the door. Surprised at so
-unexpected a visitor, Mr. Marvel told his Lordship he believed he had
-mistaken his way. Lord Danby replied, "Not, now I have found Mr.
-Marvel;" adding, "I come with a message from his Majesty, who
-wishes to know what he can do to serve you." "I know," replied
-Marvel, "the nature of courts too well to lay myself under the obligation;
-for whoever is distinguished by a prince's favours, is certainly
-expected to vote in his interest." Lord Danby told him that his
-Majesty was sensible of his merits, and on that account alone desired
-to know if there were any place at Court which he would be pleased
-with. These offers, though urged with the greatest earnestness, had
-no effect. He told the nobleman, that to accept them with honour was
-impossible; because, added he, "I must either be ungrateful to the
-King in voting against him, or false to my country in giving in to the
-measures of the Court. The only favour therefore which I beg of his
-Majesty is, that he will esteem me to be as dutiful a subject as any he
-has; and more in his proper interest by refusing these offers than if I
-had accepted them." The Lord Danby, finding that no argument
-would prevail, told him that the King had ordered him a thousand
-pounds, which he requested him to receive as a token of royal favour.
-This last offer was rejected with the same stedfastness as the first,
-though, soon after the Lord Treasurer was gone, he was under the
-necessity of sending to a friend to borrow a guinea. The greatest
-temptations of riches or honours could never bribe him to depart from
-what he thought the interest of his country, neither could the most
-imminent dangers deter him from pursuing it.
-</p>
-<p>
-He died, not without strong suspicions of being poisoned, August the
-16th, 1678, in the fifty-eighth year of his age, and was interred in the
-Church of St. Giles' in the Fields. Highly to the honour of the
-inhabitants of Kingston-upon-Hull, they in the year 1683 contributed a
-sum of money for a monument to the memory of this best of men and
-most incorruptible of senators; but the then minister of St. Giles'
-forbade its being erected in that church, on account of the following
-epitaph which was inscribed on it:&mdash;
-</p>
-<p>
-"Near this place lieth the body of Andrew Marvel, Esq., a man
-so endowed by nature, so improved by education, study, and travel;
-so consummated by experience and learning, that joining the most
-peculiar graces of wit with a singular penetration and strength of
-judgment, and exercising all these in the whole course of his life with
-unalterable steadiness in the ways of virtue, he became the ornament
-and example of his age; beloved by good men, feared by bad, admired
-by all, though imitated, alas, by few, and scarce paralleled by any.
-But a tombstone can neither contain his character, nor is marble
-necessary to transmit it to posterity; it is engraved in the minds of this
-generation, and will be always legible in his inimitable writings.
-Nevertheless, he having served near twenty years successively in
-Parliament, and that with such wisdom, dexterity, integrity, and
-courage as became a true patriot, the town of Kingston-upon-Hull,
-from whence he was constantly returned to that assembly, lamenting in
-his death the public loss, have erected this monument of their grief and
-gratitude.
-</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container"><div class="poetry">
-<p class="verseq">"Heu fragile humanum genus! Heu terrestria vana!</p>
-<p class="verse">Heu quem spectatum continet urna virum!"</p>
-</div></div>
-
-<p>
-In Mr. Mason's animated <cite>Ode to Independency</cite>, the dignified virtue of
-this truly patriotic character is described
-</p>
-<p class="pfs80">"In thoughts that breathe, and words that burn."</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_88_88" id="Footnote_88_88"></a><a href="#FNanchor_88_88"><span class="label">[88]</span></a> "Such were the words of the bards in the days of song, when the
-king heard the music of harps, and the tales of other times."&mdash;<cite>Songs of
-Selma</cite>, p. 302.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_89_89" id="Footnote_89_89"></a><a href="#FNanchor_89_89"><span class="label">[89]</span></a> In the early impressions it is spelt <em>Prusia</em>. It has been said with
-great confidence, that after twenty-five were worked off, this error in
-orthography was discovered and amended. I have seen at least fifty,
-and think it probable that all which were subscribed for were delivered
-before any alteration was made in the spelling.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_90_90" id="Footnote_90_90"></a><a href="#FNanchor_90_90"><span class="label">[90]</span></a> This word is explained in the <cite>Slang Dictionary</cite> as a cant expression
-for the threat of a blow.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_91_91" id="Footnote_91_91"></a><a href="#FNanchor_91_91"><span class="label">[91]</span></a> The fifer is designed for the portrait of a young lad who was much
-noticed by the late William Duke of Cumberland; and who, from the
-propriety of his conduct, was first rewarded with a halberd, and afterwards
-promoted to a pair of colours.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_92_92" id="Footnote_92_92"></a><a href="#FNanchor_92_92"><span class="label">[92]</span></a> This is said to be the portrait of a fellow known by the name of
-Jockey James, a most frequent attendant on the nursery for bruising,
-under the management of the mighty Broughton. Jockey had a son
-who rendered himself eminent by boxing with Smallwood, and many
-other athletic pugilists. The French pieman, grenadier, and chimney-sweeper,
-are also taken from the life, and said, by those who recollect
-their persons, to be very faithful resemblances of the persons intended.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_93_93" id="Footnote_93_93"></a><a href="#FNanchor_93_93"><span class="label">[93]</span></a> This gentleman displays the great difference between <em>an</em> officer, and
-<em>a officer</em>: he comes under the latter description.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_94_94" id="Footnote_94_94"></a><a href="#FNanchor_94_94"><span class="label">[94]</span></a> This is Mr. Thornton's remark, and rather too severe. Lord North
-once declared in the House of Commons that he saw no harm in the
-officers of the Guards. "They have nothing to do," added he, "but
-walk in the park, kiss the nursery-maids, and drink the children's milk."</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_95_95" id="Footnote_95_95"></a><a href="#FNanchor_95_95"><span class="label">[95]</span></a> This figure is introduced in the very curious print of "Enthusiasm
-Delineated," and in the eleventh print of "Industry and Idleness," and
-was designed as a portrait of Mother Douglass of the Piazza.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_96_96" id="Footnote_96_96"></a><a href="#FNanchor_96_96"><span class="label">[96]</span></a> Lavater's character of this people is not exactly similar to Hogarth's
-delineation; it is, however, curious: "The form of a Frenchman is
-different from that of all other nations, and difficult to describe in words.
-No other man has so little of the firm or deep traits, or so much motion.
-He is all appearance, all gesture; therefore the first impression seldom
-deceives, but declares who and what he is. His imagination is incapable
-of high flights; and the sublime in all arts is to him offence. Hence
-his dislike of whatever is antique in art or literature, his deafness to
-true music, his blindness to the highest beauties of painting. His last
-most striking trait is, that he is astonished at everything, and cannot
-imagine how it is possible men should be any other than they are at
-Paris."</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_97_97" id="Footnote_97_97"></a><a href="#FNanchor_97_97"><span class="label">[97]</span></a> Among the number of ingenious allusions which the seekers of
-Hogarth's meanings have pointed out, I have never heard it remarked
-that the standard waves immediately over this under-sized hero, who is
-consequently <em>under the standard</em>!</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_98_98" id="Footnote_98_98"></a><a href="#FNanchor_98_98"><span class="label">[98]</span></a> Let not the reader imagine that this quotation alludes to the Duke's
-ponderous equestrian statue in Cavendish Square. That glittering
-monument of burnished brass bears no very striking resemblance to
-either an angel or a fiery Pegasus. It must, however, be considered as
-a monument of the taste, vanity, and gratitude of Colonel Salter.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_99_99" id="Footnote_99_99"></a><a href="#FNanchor_99_99"><span class="label">[99]</span></a> Grotesque delineations have more influence upon the populace than
-the philosopher is apt to imagine. Sir Robert Walpole inspected every
-political print and political ballad that was published, and said that
-from these vulgar effusions he could form a certain judgment of the
-genuine spirit and local prejudices which actuated the multitude.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_100_100" id="Footnote_100_100"></a><a href="#FNanchor_100_100"><span class="label">[100]</span></a> Election is, I believe, in its general sense, the act of choosing. We
-see by the application of the word in this book, it was not then confined
-to choosing a member of Parliament, but applied indiscriminately to
-either bird or beast.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_101_101" id="Footnote_101_101"></a><a href="#FNanchor_101_101"><span class="label">[101]</span></a> This is mere conjecture; but from Jackson the humpbacked jockey,
-and some other sedate personages who were present, I think it is more
-likely to be designed for that place than any other.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_102_102" id="Footnote_102_102"></a><a href="#FNanchor_102_102"><span class="label">[102]</span></a> A man of rank with these plebeian propensities might in the year
-1759 be considered as a phenomenon: in this age of elegant accomplishment
-and universal refinement, the thing is common. We now see
-men of family and fortune ambitious of becoming umpires in battles
-between Big Ben and the Ruffian!</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_103_103" id="Footnote_103_103"></a><a href="#FNanchor_103_103"><span class="label">[103]</span></a> The "March to Finchley."</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_104_104" id="Footnote_104_104"></a><a href="#FNanchor_104_104"><span class="label">[104]</span></a> When Garrick first came on the stage, and one very sultry evening
-in the month of May performed the character of Lear, he in the first
-four acts received the customary tribute of applause. At the conclusion
-of the fifth, when he wept over the body of Cordelia, every eye caught
-the soft infection&mdash;the big round tear ran down every cheek. At this
-interesting moment, to the astonishment of all present, his face assumed
-a new character, and his whole frame appeared agitated by a new passion:
-it was not tragic, for he was evidently endeavouring to suppress
-a laugh. In a few seconds the attendant nobles appeared to be affected
-in the same manner; and the beauteous Cordelia, who was reclined
-upon a crimson couch, opening her eyes to see what occasioned the
-interruption, leapt from her sofa, and with the majesty of England, the
-gallant Albany, and tough old Kent, ran laughing off the stage. The
-audience could not account for this strange termination of a tragedy in
-any other way than by supposing the <i lang="la" xml:lang="la">dramatis personæ</i> were seized with
-a sudden frenzy; but their risibility had a different source. A fat
-Whitechapel butcher, seated on the centre of the front bench in the pit,
-was accompanied by his mastiff, who being accustomed to sit on the
-same seat with his master at home, naturally thought he might enjoy
-the like privilege here. The butcher sat very back, and the quadruped
-finding a fair opening, got upon the bench, and fixing his fore-paws on
-the rail of the orchestra, peered at the performers with as upright a
-head and as grave an air as the most sagacious critic of his day. Our
-corpulent slaughter-man was made of melting stuff, and not being
-accustomed to a playhouse heat, found himself much oppressed by the
-weight of a large and well-powdered Sunday peruke, which, for the
-gratification of cooling and wiping his head, he pulled off, and placed
-on the head of his mastiff. The dog being in so conspicuous, so obtrusive
-a situation, caught the eye of Mr. Garrick and the other performers.
-A mastiff in a churchwarden's wig (for the butcher was a
-parish officer) was too much: it would have provoked laughter in Lear
-himself, at the moment he was most distressed; no wonder, then, that
-it had such an effect on his representative.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_105_105" id="Footnote_105_105"></a><a href="#FNanchor_105_105"><span class="label">[105]</span></a> In the second canto of a poem entitled <cite>The Gamblers</cite>, are the following
-notes:&mdash;
-</p>
-<p>
-"By the cockpit laws, the man who cannot or who will not pay his
-debts of honour, is liable to exaltation in a basket."
-</p>
-<p>
-"Stephen's exaltation in a basket, and his there continuing to bet
-though unable to pay, is taken from a scene in one of Hogarth's prints,
-humorously setting forth that there are men whom a passion for gaming
-does not forsake, even in the very hour that they stand proclaimed
-insolvents."</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_106_106" id="Footnote_106_106"></a><a href="#FNanchor_106_106"><span class="label">[106]</span></a> Frequently called Deptford Nan, and sometimes dignified with a
-title&mdash;Duchess of Deptford! She was a famous cock-feeder, well
-known at Newmarket, and did the honours of the gentlemen's ordinary
-at Northampton, while a bachelor presided at the table appropriated to
-the ladies.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_107_107" id="Footnote_107_107"></a><a href="#FNanchor_107_107"><span class="label">[107]</span></a> A small print published in the year 1732, of which there are three
-copies.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_108_108" id="Footnote_108_108"></a><a href="#FNanchor_108_108"><span class="label">[108]</span></a> I have inserted the name of Gay on the authority of Mr. Nichols'
-<cite>Anecdotes</cite>, in page 177 of which is the following remark from a correspondent:&mdash;
-</p>
-<p>
-"That Pope was silent on the merits of Hogarth (as one of your
-readers has observed) should excite little astonishment, as our artist's
-print on the South Sea exhibits the translator of Homer in no very
-flattering point of view. He is represented with one of his hands in the
-pocket of a fat personage, who wears a horn-book at his girdle. For
-whom this figure was designed is doubtful; perhaps it was meant for
-Gay, who was a fat man, and a loser in the scheme, etc. The horn-book
-he wears at his girdle perhaps refers to the fables he wrote for the Duke
-of Cumberland. The conclusion to the inscription under this plate&mdash;'Guess
-at the rest, you'll find out more'&mdash;seems also to imply a consciousness
-of such personal satire as it was not prudent to explain."
-</p>
-<p>
-The conjecture that this is designed for Gay is fair, but I think not
-quite conclusive. Hogarth would not have represented the translator
-of Homer diving into the coat pocket of a brother bard for coin, and
-Gay could not be robbed of anything else. May not the label with
-A&mdash;B&mdash;, etc., be intended to point out Arbuthnot: he also was a fat
-man, and so careless of fame, that he suffered Pope, and some other
-eminent contemporary authors, to plunder him of the best part of his
-writings, which they afterwards modestly published as their own; <i lang="la" xml:lang="la">vide</i>
-a very large portion of <cite>Martinus Scriblerus</cite>, particularly Pope's own
-edition, published in 1742.
-</p>
-<p>
-Pope is again introduced in a print published about the year 1728,
-entitled "Rich's Glory, or The Triumphant Entry into Covent Garden,"
-improperly said to be the production of Hogarth.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_109_109" id="Footnote_109_109"></a><a href="#FNanchor_109_109"><span class="label">[109]</span></a> This satire is wound up with a well-turned apology for the folly,
-but even here a dart must be hurled at the Duke.&mdash;The dart recoils,
-and returns to him who threw it; for although his Grace was vainly
-ostentatious, and absurdly extravagant, he was kind-hearted and beneficent
-to a fault:&mdash;
-</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container"><div class="poetry">
-<p class="verseq">"Yet hence the poor are cloth'd, the hungry fed:</p>
-<p class="verse">Health to himself, and to his infants bread,</p>
-<p class="verse">The lab'rer bears: what his hard heart denies,</p>
-<p class="verse">His charitable vanity supplies.</p>
-<p class="verse">Another age shall see the golden ear</p>
-<p class="verse">Embrown the slope, and nod on the parterre;</p>
-<p class="verse">Deep harvests bury all his pride has plann'd,</p>
-<p class="verse">And laughing Ceres re-assume the land."</p>
-</div></div>
-
-<p>
-It is a singular circumstance that the prophecy in the last four lines
-(for a prophecy it must be called) should be fulfilled, I had almost said
-in the poet's lifetime. A very few years after his death, when Hallet the
-upholsterer purchased Canons, the park was ploughed up and sown
-with corn.
-</p>
-<p>
-I have somewhere seen an epigram, written soon after the publication
-of this epistle:&mdash;
-</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container"><div class="poetry">
-<p class="verseq">"What Chandos builds let Pope no more deride,</p>
-<p class="verse">Because he took not Nature for his guide,</p>
-<p class="verse">Since, mighty Bard&mdash;in thy own form we see</p>
-<p class="verse">That nature may mistake, as well as he."</p>
-</div></div>
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_110_110" id="Footnote_110_110"></a><a href="#FNanchor_110_110"><span class="label">[110]</span></a> We have amateurs of boxing, and why not of cock-fighting?</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_111_111" id="Footnote_111_111"></a><a href="#FNanchor_111_111"><span class="label">[111]</span></a> This noble diversion may with more propriety be called royal in
-India than in England, for it is not peculiar to Great Britain, neither is
-it confined within the narrow boundaries of Europe. In a picture which
-Mr. Zoffani designed from nature, he has exhibited the Nabob of Oude,
-and a crowd of his courtiers, dressed in their robes of state surrounding
-a cockpit. The Asiatic Sovereign, his brother, and his attendants,
-display as much eagerness for gain, and rapacity of physiognomy, as
-is to be seen in the most notorious of our Newmarket gamblers.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_112_112" id="Footnote_112_112"></a><a href="#FNanchor_112_112"><span class="label">[112]</span></a> Throwing at cocks on this day is, I hope and believe, a less prevalent
-custom than it once was. Our ancestors must have formed
-strange notions of the duties that were acceptable to the Deity on
-commencement of Lent, when they set apart the eve as a proper
-time for the martyrdom of this inoffensive animal.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_113_113" id="Footnote_113_113"></a><a href="#FNanchor_113_113"><span class="label">[113]</span></a>
-</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container"><div class="poetry">
-<p class="verseq">"Wilt thou draw near the nature of the gods,</p>
-<p class="verse">Draw near them then in being merciful;</p>
-<p class="verse">Sweet mercy is nobility's true badge."</p>
-</div></div>
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_114_114" id="Footnote_114_114"></a><a href="#FNanchor_114_114"><span class="label">[114]</span></a> "A beautiful Diana, with her trussed-up robes, the crescent alone
-wanting, stands on the high altar to receive homage in the character of
-St. Agnes, in a pretty church dedicated to her (<i lang="it" xml:lang="it">fuor della Porte</i>), where
-it is supposed she suffered martyrdom: and why? Why, for not venerating
-that very goddess Diana, and for refusing to walk in her procession
-at the new moons, like a good Christian girl. Such contradictions put
-one from oneself, as Shakspeare says."&mdash;Mrs. Piozzi's <cite>Letters</cite>.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_115_115" id="Footnote_115_115"></a><a href="#FNanchor_115_115"><span class="label">[115]</span></a> A catalogue of the massacres, slaughters, and assassinations which
-have taken place for little differences of opinion, would fill a library.
-Superstition has been the general cause of man destroying man.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_116_116" id="Footnote_116_116"></a><a href="#FNanchor_116_116"><span class="label">[116]</span></a> The infatuation of the lower order of the people during the drawing
-of a lottery is hardly to be conceived. They cannot consult Virgil,
-but they consult every star in the firmament, and every male and female
-astrologer in the parish, to find out lucky numbers. Figures chalked
-on the wall, and dreams, have great credit; and much respect is paid
-to the year of their birth, a husband's or wife's death, etc. etc. The
-destructive consequences of this thirst for divination it is not necessary
-to enumerate,&mdash;they are recorded in the annals of Bethlehem Hospital
-and the Newgate Calendar.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_117_117" id="Footnote_117_117"></a><a href="#FNanchor_117_117"><span class="label">[117]</span></a> A field preacher in one of the provinces, from the strength of his
-lungs and length of his extemporary harangues, being for some months
-attended by a more numerous congregation than the parson of the parish,
-began to think himself the more orthodox man. Fraught with this idea,
-he one Sunday evening went to the vestry-room, waited until the service
-concluded, and then very rudely attacked the clergyman, telling him he
-came to convince him, to confound him, and to convert him by the
-word! This was followed by the recital of a thousand texts from various
-parts of the Holy Scriptures, so combined as to prove whatever he
-wished; and concluded by, "This is all from the Bible, and by the Bible
-I desires to abide.&mdash;Answer me by the same book." The clergyman
-being a man of some humour, after hearing him with much patience,
-very coolly asked this labourer in the vineyard if he recollected a text
-in the book of Kings, where it is written, "Then Ahithophel set his
-house in order, and went and hanged himself." "Certainly," replied
-the man, "I know it to be scripture." "Good," added the divine;
-"examine the Gospel of St. Luke, and you will find it written, 'Go
-and do thou likewise.' This I earnestly recommend, and so farewell."</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_118_118" id="Footnote_118_118"></a><a href="#FNanchor_118_118"><span class="label">[118]</span></a> "Some witches, examined and executed at Mohra, in Sweden, in
-1670, confessed that the devil gives them a beast about the bigness and
-shape of a young cat, which they call a carrier, etc."&mdash;Glanville <cite>On
-Witches</cite>, p. 494.
-</p>
-<p>
-"For their being sucked by their familiar, we know so little of the
-nature of demons and spirits, that it is no wonder we cannot certainly
-divine the reason of so strange an action. And yet we may conjecture
-at some things that may render it less improbable. For some have
-thought that the Genii (whom both the Platonic and Christian antiquity
-thought embodied) are re-created by the reeks and vapours of human
-blood, and the spirits that proceed from them: which supposal (if we
-grant them bodies) is not unlikely, everything being refreshed and
-nourished by its like. And that they are not perfectly abstracted from
-all body and matter; besides the reverence we owe to the wisest antiquity,
-there are several considerable arguments I could allege to render it
-probable: which things supposed, the devil's suckling the sorceress is
-no great wonder, nor difficult to be accounted for. Or perhaps this
-may be only a diabolical sacrament and ceremony to confirm the hellish
-covenant."&mdash;<cite>Glanville</cite>, p. 10.
-</p>
-<p>
-In the above, and any future quotations I may find it necessary to
-make from this great and sagacious author, I beg it may be observed
-that I quote from the fourth edition, published in 1726.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_119_119" id="Footnote_119_119"></a><a href="#FNanchor_119_119"><span class="label">[119]</span></a> Master Lilly remarketh that angels (and he must unquestionably
-mean to include fallen angels) very rarely speak unto any one; but when
-they do, it is like the Irish&mdash;very much in the throat.&mdash;<cite>Lilly's Life</cite>, p. 88.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_120_120" id="Footnote_120_120"></a><a href="#FNanchor_120_120"><span class="label">[120]</span></a> Curses are not peculiar to one church; John Boys, D.D., Dean of
-Canterbury, 1629, educated at Clare Hall, in Cambridge, was famous
-for his postils in defence of our liturgy, and was also much esteemed
-for his good life. He gained great applause by turning the Lord's
-Prayer into the following execration, when he preached at Paul's Cross:&mdash;"Our
-Pope which art in Rome, cursed be thy name; perish may thy
-kingdom; hindered may thy will be, as it is in heaven, so in earth.
-Give us this day our cup in the Lord's Supper, and remit our monies
-which we have given for thy indulgences, as we send them back unto
-thee; and lead us not into heresy, but free us from misery, for thine is
-the infernal pitch and sulphur, for ever and ever. Amen."</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_121_121" id="Footnote_121_121"></a><a href="#FNanchor_121_121"><span class="label">[121]</span></a> "Several of the female devotees have waxen images in their hands.
-Master Glanville observeth that the devil frequently bringeth unto
-witches a waxen picture, which they, having christened it by the name
-of the person they wish to torment, thrust pins into; using these words
-as they perform their ceremonies, <em>Thout tout, a tout, tout, throughout
-and about.&mdash;Rentum, tormentum, etc. etc.</em>"&mdash;<cite>Glanville</cite>, p. 297.
-</p>
-<p>
-How wonderful has Shakspeare appropriated these idle tales in his
-tragedy of <cite>Macbeth</cite>! He did not build upon the fables of Greece and
-Rome; but leaving the mob of heathen deities to range over the classic
-ground which gave them birth, leaving those writers who draw all their
-supplies from the fountain of antiquity to take their copious draughts
-unmolested, he adopted the creed of his own nation, and on the dim
-legends of superstition, and oral traditions of credulity, raised a superstructure
-which has stood the test of ages, become more admired as it
-has been more minutely examined, and is now gazed at with an almost
-idolatrous veneration.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_122_122" id="Footnote_122_122"></a><a href="#FNanchor_122_122"><span class="label">[122]</span></a> The influence of these men is astonishing. They have the mind,
-body, and outward estate of their proselytes under their absolute direction;
-all their assertions are considered as prophecies, and every request
-has the force of a command.
-</p>
-<p>
-Men seem to have a natural tendency to a belief in divination; and we
-have many instances where the commanders of armies have made great
-use of this easy faith. When Cromwell was in Scotland, a soldier stood
-with Lilly's <cite>Almanac</cite> in his hand, and as the troops passed him, roared
-out, "Lo! hear what Lilly saith: you are promised victory! Fight it
-out, brave boys; and when you have conquered&mdash;read the month's
-prediction."</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_123_123" id="Footnote_123_123"></a><a href="#FNanchor_123_123"><span class="label">[123]</span></a> Whosoever wisheth to know more of this Surrey Semiramis and
-her brood of rabbits, may consult the <cite>Memoirs of M. St. Andre</cite>, and
-some twelve or fifteen ingenious pamphlets, published about the year
-1726, at which time a number of surgeons subscribed a guinea each
-to Mr. Hogarth, for a print from a whimsical design he had previously
-made on this very philosophical subject.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_124_124" id="Footnote_124_124"></a><a href="#FNanchor_124_124"><span class="label">[124]</span></a> The figure is, I believe, intended for the boy of Bilson, who, with
-an ostrich-like appetite, swallowed as many tenpenny nails as would
-have furnished a petty ironmonger's shop. This young gentleman, who
-in his day deceived a whole county, was only thirteen years of age.
-His extraordinary fits, agitations, and the surprising distempers with
-which he seemed to be afflicted, induced those who saw him to believe
-he was bewitched, and possessed with a devil. During the time he
-was in fits, he appeared both deaf and blind; writhing, groaning, and
-panting; and although often pinched, pricked with needles, tickled,
-severely whipped, and otherwise corrected, never seemed sensible of
-what was done to him. When he was thought to be out of his fits, he
-digested nothing that was given him for nourishment, but would often
-astonish those present by bringing up thread, straw, crooked pins, nails,
-needles, etc. At this period his throat swelled, his tongue grew rigid,
-and he appeared to be incapable of speaking.
-</p>
-<p>
-This juvenile impostor accused a poor honest industrious old woman
-of witchcraft, and asserted that she had bewitched him. By his artful
-behaviour when she was brought into the room where he was, he raised
-in the minds of those about him a strong presumption of his accusations
-being founded. Under these impressions, the woman was tried at
-Stafford assizes, but the jury had sense enough to acquit her. By the
-judge's recommendation, the boy was committed to the care of the
-Bishop of Lichfield and Coventry, who happened to be present in
-court. His Grace took him to his palace at Eccleshall, and there,
-having the previous advice of several physicians, intended to try the
-effect of severity; but being in the meantime informed that the boy
-always fell into violent agitations upon hearing that verse of St. John's
-Gospel, "In the beginning was the Word," etc., resolved to try another
-experiment. Assuming a grave and austere countenance, he thus
-addressed him:&mdash;
-</p>
-<p>
-"Boy, it is either thou thyself or the devil that abhorrest these words
-of the Gospel; and if it be the devil, there is no doubt of his understanding
-all languages, so that he cannot but know and show his
-abhorrence when I recite the same sentence out of the Gospel in the
-Greek text; but if it be thyself, then thou art an execrable wretch, who
-playest the devil's part in loathing that portion of the Gospel of Christ,
-which above all other scripture doth express the admirable union of
-the Godhead in one Christ and Saviour, which union is the arch pillar
-of man's salvation. Wherefore look unto thyself, for now thou art to
-be put unto trial, and mark diligently whether it be the same scripture
-which shall be read unto thee out of the Greek Testament, at the
-reading whereof in the English tongue thou dost seem to be so much
-troubled and tormented."
-</p>
-<p>
-This experiment succeeded, for neither the boy nor the devil understood
-the Greek version.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_125_125" id="Footnote_125_125"></a><a href="#FNanchor_125_125"><span class="label">[125]</span></a> It was deemed an approved remedy for witchcraft, to put a small
-wax model of any one under this baneful influence into a quart bottle
-with water, cork it up to confine the spirit, and place it before the fire.
-Notwithstanding all these precautions, the spirit sometimes forced the
-cork, and cast the contents of the bottle a considerable height.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_126_126" id="Footnote_126_126"></a><a href="#FNanchor_126_126"><span class="label">[126]</span></a> Of the writings of this paragon of English monarchs&mdash;so wise that
-he was called the Solomon of Great Britain&mdash;it has been truly said,
-"They are to be found in chandlers' shops even unto this day."</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_127_127" id="Footnote_127_127"></a><a href="#FNanchor_127_127"><span class="label">[127]</span></a> A very grave historian relates, that the ghost of Sir George Villiers
-appeared to one who had been his servant, charging him to inform his
-son of the plan laid to destroy him! The servant obeyed his instructions,
-and informed his Grace, but the Duke wanted faith&mdash;was negligent&mdash;and
-was assassinated: though it does not seem probable that the crazed
-enthusiast who committed the murder had sufficient coherence of mind
-to lay any regular plan.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_128_128" id="Footnote_128_128"></a><a href="#FNanchor_128_128"><span class="label">[128]</span></a> Drelincourt's <cite>Defence against the Fears of Death</cite> is well written;
-and in the confidence that a translation would sell, the bookseller struck
-off a very large impression. They lay undisturbed in his warehouse
-until Daniel Defoe added this ridiculous narrative, which carried the
-book through one-and-twenty editions.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_129_129" id="Footnote_129_129"></a><a href="#FNanchor_129_129"><span class="label">[129]</span></a> This drummer was in the early part of his life a trooper in
-Cromwell's army; and as almost all this regiment of saints considered
-themselves in St. Paul's dragoons, our drummer occasionally preached,
-exhorted, and expounded. When the Parliamentary army was disbanded,
-or put under other commanders, the manners of the people had
-a sudden and violent change; extreme strictness was succeeded by
-universal dissipation, and the whole nation displayed their abhorrence
-of their late rulers, and loyalty to their new sovereign, by general
-licentiousness. A drum beat to a psalm tune would no longer attract
-an audience; but still it was a favourite instrument, and our heroic
-trooper, being free from military engagements, drummed his way
-through the kingdom with a forged pass. Happening to beat up in the
-neighbourhood of Tedworth, he attracted the notice of a Mr. Mompesson,
-who seized the martial instrument, and punished the bearer.
-From that time his ears were assailed by a perpetual drumming, and
-his house for two or three years haunted by apparitions. It attracted
-the notice of several of the neighbouring clergy, and his Majesty Charles
-the Second, wishing to be satisfied about every particular, sent down a
-number of persons to converse with this noisy spirit; but during the time
-they stayed no spirit appeared, neither was the sound of a drum heard.
-Notwithstanding this, poor dub-a-dub was tried at Salisbury assizes,
-found guilty of being a wizard, and luckily escaped with only transportation
-for life.
-</p>
-<p>
-Upon this story was founded Addison's play of <cite>The Drummer, or the
-Haunted House</cite>, which has too much good sense to be generally relished
-at the theatres.
-</p>
-<p>
-The Cock Lane ghost was engaged in scratching and hammering a
-very short time before the plate was published. This ridiculous imposture
-attracted the notice of many respectable characters. That one
-man, whose writings are a mirror of truth and philosophy, and whose
-life was an honour to human nature, should be so far under the influence
-of superstition as to attend this nocturnal nonsense, draws a pitying
-sigh.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_130_130" id="Footnote_130_130"></a><a href="#FNanchor_130_130"><span class="label">[130]</span></a> On the late John Wesley's particular opinions I do not presume to
-make any comment; but his zealous and unremitting exertions in what
-he deemed a good cause, added to the primitive simplicity of his
-manners, entitled him to high respect.
-</p>
-<p>
-Mr. Glanville was the patriarch of witchcraft, and therefore a very
-proper high priest in the temple of credulity. As his book gained him a
-good benefice, and as a number of his proselytes consider <cite lang="la" xml:lang="la">Sadducismus
-Triumphatus</cite> entitled to equal credence with holy writ, I have subjoined
-a few extracts for the edification of those who may not think the volume
-from which they are taken worth perusal. It abounds with examples
-of barbarity, flowing from a blind and bigoted credulity, at which
-human nature shudders.
-</p>
-<p>
-A relation of the strange witchcraft, discovered in the village of
-Mohra, in Swedeland, about the year 1670:&mdash;
-</p>
-<p>
-"The news of this witchcraft coming to the king's ear, his Majesty
-was pleased to appoint commissioners, some of the clergy and some of
-the laity, to make a journey to the town above mentioned to examine the
-whole business. The commissioners met on the 12th of August at the
-parson's house, and to them the minister and several people of fashion
-complained, with tears in their eyes, of the miserable condition they
-were in, and therefore begged of them to think of some way whereby
-they might be delivered from that calamity. They gave the commissioners
-very strange instances of the devil's tyranny among them:
-how, by the help of witches, he had drawn some hundreds of children
-to him, and made them subject to his power; how he hath been seen
-to go in a visible shape through the country, and appeared daily to the
-people; how he had wrought upon the poorer sort, by presenting them
-with meat and drink, and this way allured them to himself; with other
-circumstances to be mentioned hereafter. They therefore begged of the
-Lords Commissioners to root out this hellish crew, that they might
-regain their former rest and quietness; and the rather, because the
-children, which used to be carried away in the country or district of
-Esdaile, since some witches had been burnt there, remained unmolested.
-</p>
-<p>
-"Examination being made, there were discovered no less than three-score
-and ten witches in the village aforesaid; three-and-twenty of
-which, freely confessing their crimes, were condemned to die; the rest,
-one pretending she was with child, and the others denying, and pleading
-not guilty, were sent to Faluna, where most of them were afterwards
-executed.
-</p>
-<p>
-"Fifteen children, which likewise confessed they were engaged in
-this witchery, died as the rest; six-and-thirty of them, between nine
-and sixteen years, who had been less guilty, were forced to run the
-gauntlet: twenty more, who had no great inclination, yet had been
-seduced to these hellish enterprises, because they were very young, were
-condemned to be lashed with rods upon their hands for three Sundays
-together, at the church door; and the aforesaid six-and-thirty were also
-doomed to be lashed this way once a week for a whole year together.
-The number of seduced children was about three hundred, etc. The
-above narrative is taken out of the public register, where all this, with
-more circumstances, is related."&mdash;<cite>Glanville</cite>, p. 494.
-</p>
-<p>
-"At Stockholm, in the year 1676, a young woman accused her
-mother of being a witch, and swore positively that she had carried her
-away at night; whereupon both the judges and ministers of the town
-exhorted the old woman to confession and repentance. But she stiffly
-denied the allegations, pleaded innocence; and though they burnt
-another witch before her face, and lighted the fire she was to burn in
-before her, yet she still justified herself, and continued to do so till the
-last; and remaining obstinate, was burnt. A fortnight or three weeks
-after, her daughter, who had accused her, came to the judges in open
-court (weeping and howling), confessed that she had accused her mother
-falsely, out of a spleen she had against her for not gratifying her in a
-thing she desired, and had charged her with a crime of which she was
-perfectly innocent. Hereupon the judges gave orders for <em>her</em> immediate
-execution."&mdash;Horneck's <cite>Introduction to a Narrative of Witchcraft, etc.</cite>&mdash;<cite>Glanville</cite>,
-p. 481.
-</p>
-<p>
-These are the horrid effects of credulity. For the dreadful devastations
-made among the human race by superstition, we may read the
-history of the Inquisition. Among myriads of examples, I was much
-struck by the following:&mdash;
-</p>
-<p>
-"Along with the Jews that were to be burnt at an <em>auto-da-fe</em>, there
-was a girl not seventeen years of age, who, standing on that side where
-the queen sat, petitioned for mercy. She was wonderfully pretty; and
-looking at the queen, while her eyes streamed with tears, in a most
-pathetic tone of voice exclaimed, 'Will not the presence of my sovereign
-make an alteration in my fate? Consider how short a period I have
-lived, and that I suffer for adherence to a religion which I imbibed
-with my mother's milk. Mercy! mercy! mercy!' The queen turned
-away her eyes,&mdash;was evidently moved by compassion, but&mdash;durst not
-ask the holy fathers for even a respite."&mdash;<cite>M. d'Aunoy</cite>, p. 66.
-</p>
-<p>
-What unlimited power! A queen dares not intercede for the pardon
-of a young girl, guilty of no other crime than adhering to the faith of
-her ancestors!
-</p>
-<p>
-One of the most shocking circumstances that attend these consecrated
-murders, is the indulgences which the Roman pontiffs have attached to
-the executioners. Those who lead the poor condemned wretches to the
-fire, and throw them into the flames, gain indulgences for one hundred
-years. They who content themselves with only seeing them executed,
-obtain fifty. What horror! The most detestable crimes, the most
-unnatural cruelties, are made a means of obtaining pardons from the
-God of mercy!</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_131_131" id="Footnote_131_131"></a><a href="#FNanchor_131_131"><span class="label">[131]</span></a> Whitfield's <cite>Hymns</cite>, p. 130.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_132_132" id="Footnote_132_132"></a><a href="#FNanchor_132_132"><span class="label">[132]</span></a> See Mr. Burke's pamphlet on the French Revolution.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_133_133" id="Footnote_133_133"></a><a href="#FNanchor_133_133"><span class="label">[133]</span></a> This is a fair representation of what the Guards were then. The
-highly-disciplined troop commanded by his Royal Highness of York
-defy satire.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_134_134" id="Footnote_134_134"></a><a href="#FNanchor_134_134"><span class="label">[134]</span></a> See John Wilkes' history of the man after God's own heart.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_135_135" id="Footnote_135_135"></a><a href="#FNanchor_135_135"><span class="label">[135]</span></a> Hogarth seems to have thought that Mr. Pitt wished to be a perpetual
-dictator; and, in truth, the Secretary's own assertion in some
-degree justified the supposition: "He would not be responsible for
-measures which he was no longer allowed to guide." Whether the
-artist was right or wrong in his opinion, I do not presume to assert: I
-have endeavoured to describe characters as he has delineated them;
-but with respect to this great man, the safest way will be to quote his
-contemporaries. I have subjoined two portraits, drawn in his own
-day; let the reader adopt that which pleases him best. They prove
-how difficult it is to ascertain what were the abilities of a statesman
-from any accounts given during his life. One party assert that Mr. Pitt
-unites, with the eloquence of Cicero and the force of Demosthenes, the
-conciseness of Sallust and the polished periods of Isocrates! Another,&mdash;but
-to extract a part is not doing justice to the writers.
-</p>
-
-<p class="center"><span class="smcap">Chatham.</span></p>
-<p>
-"As this lord has long been dead to the world, we shall speak of
-him as a man that has been.
-</p>
-<p>
-"A remarkable reflection, arising from the character of Lord
-Chatham, strikes us: No statesman was ever more successful, and no
-statesman ever deserved less to have been so.
-</p>
-<p>
-"This man entered into the army very early in life, and there he
-ought to have remained. His enterprise, his rashness, and his scrupulous
-sense of honour, were qualities extremely proper in the profession
-of arms, and would have adorned any military station, except that of a
-chief commander. But the field he renounced for the Cabinet, and
-ceased to be a good soldier that he might be a bad statesman. In
-nature, he was rash, impetuous, haughty, and uncontrollable; and these
-dangerous properties were neither tempered nor improved by education.
-To those advantages which are acquired by study, and those great
-views which are communicated by habits of reflection, he was entirely
-a stranger. His quickness was not corrected by judgment, and his
-mind frequently was tired of the objects presented to it before it could
-perceive or comprehend them. In a country where eloquence is little
-known, his noise and vociferation acquired that name; and without
-the experience of common sense, he was extolled as superior to Demosthenes
-or Tully. His speeches were not wanting in fire, but they
-were innocent of thought. He was perhaps the only man of his time
-who could harangue for many hours without communicating one
-distinct and well-digested idea to his audience. In estimating his own
-merit he knew no bounds. His vanity was excessive: he saw every
-man inferior to himself: on every man, therefore, he lavished his contempt.
-Capricious to the most boyish excess, he was perpetually
-forming resolutions, which he abandoned before he could put them in
-execution. Yet his instability, through a fortuitous and whimsical
-concurrence of circumstances, generally led the way to success. The
-happy blunders of his administration procured him a reputation to
-which he had no title. Every scheme he planned ought to have miscarried.
-We admire his good fortune, not his wisdom. Popularity
-was the idol to which he bowed&mdash;a certain proof that his conduct was
-not influenced by those superior ideas which arise in high, liberal, and
-virtuous minds. Yet to this idol he would have sacrificed everything:
-it would have sacrificed everything to him. He possessed that intemperate
-pride which, instead of guarding him from indecent errors, led
-him to indiscretions; and a respectable character was seldom a security
-from the licentious fury of his tongue. In private life he was restless,
-fretful, unsocial, and perpetually affecting complaints which he did not
-feel: in public life he was weak, headstrong, imprudent, and had no
-quality of a good minister but enterprise. If he had continued in his
-first profession, he might have served his country with honour; but his
-ambition prompted him to assume the character of a statesman, and he
-abused it.
-</p>
-<p>
-"On the whole, he possessed virtues; but his passions hurried them
-into excess, and he did not even wish to restrain them."
-</p>
-
-<p class="p1" />
-<p>Hear the other side:&mdash;</p>
-
-<p class="center"><span class="smcap">Character of the late Earl of Chatham.</span></p>
-
-<p>
-"The Secretary stood alone; modern degeneracy had not reached
-him; original and unaccommodating&mdash;the features of his character had
-the hardihood of antiquity. No State chicanery, no narrow system of
-vicious politics, no idle contest for ministerial victories, sunk him to the
-vulgar level of the great; but overbearing and persuasive, his object
-was&mdash;England; his ambition&mdash;fame! Without dividing, he destroyed
-party; without corrupting, he made a venal age unanimous. France
-sunk beneath him. With one hand he smote the house of Bourbon,
-and wielded with the other the democracy of England. The sight of
-his mind was infinite; and his schemes were to affect, not England
-and the present age only, but Europe and posterity. Wonderful were
-the means by which these schemes were accomplished; always seasonable,
-always adequate, the suggestion of an understanding animated by
-ardour, and enlightened by prophecy. The ordinary feelings which
-make life amiable and indolent&mdash;those sensations which allure and
-vulgarize&mdash;were unknown to him. A character so exalted, so strenuous,
-so various, so authoritative, astonished a corrupt age, and the
-Treasury trembled at the name of Pitt through all her classes of venality.
-Corruption imagined, indeed, that she found defects in this statesman,
-and talked much of the inconsistency of his glory, and much of
-the ruin of his victories; but the history of his country and the calamity
-of his enemies answered and refuted her. Nor were his political abilities
-his only talents; his eloquence was an era in the senate, peculiar
-and spontaneous, familiarly expressing gigantic sentiments and instinctive
-wisdom: not like the torrent of Demosthenes, or the conflagration
-of Tully; it resembled sometimes the thunder and sometimes
-the music of the spheres. He did not conduct the understanding
-through the painful subtlety of argumentation; nor was he for ever on
-the rack of exertion, but rather lightened on the subject, and reached
-the point by the flashings of the mind, which, like those of his eye,
-were felt, but could not be followed. Upon the whole, there was in
-this man something that could create, reform, or subvert; an understanding,
-a spirit, and an eloquence to summon mankind to society, or
-to break the bonds of slavery asunder, and rule the wildness of free
-minds with unbounded authority: something that could establish or
-overwhelm empire, and strike a blow in the world that should resound
-through the universe."
-</p>
-<p>
-At the time of Lord Chatham being interred, it was intimated in the
-public prints that an epitaph descriptive of his talents and services
-was to be inscribed on his tombstone; and that any one writing such
-an epitaph would render an acceptable service to the committee who
-had the management of his monument. The following was sent, but
-as it was unkindly rejected by them, it is here inserted:&mdash;
-</p>
-
-<p class="pfs70">
-"<span class="smcap">HERE LIES THE BODY OF WILLIAM PITT, EARL OF CHATHAM;<br />
-A GREAT AND ELOQUENT STATESMAN,<br />
-WHOM THE KING DID NOT CONSULT OR EMPLOY,<br />
-AND WHOM THE KING WAS RESOLVED NEVER TO CONSULT<br />
-OR EMPLOY;<br />
-A MOST INFORMED AND ENLIGHTENED SENATOR,<br />
-A MOST CONVINCING AND PERSUASIVE ORATOR,<br />
-WHOSE OPINIONS AND ADVICE THE PARLIAMENT HEARD WITH MOST<br />
-ILLIBERAL IMPATIENCE,<br />
-AND WHOSE ARGUMENTS THEY TREATED WITH MOST<br />
-SOVEREIGN CONTEMPT.<br />
-THESE WERE THE SENTIMENTS,<br />
-AND THIS THE CONDUCT, OF BOTH KING AND PARLIAMENT.<br />
-TO PERPETUATE THE MEMORY OF HIS ABILITIES,<br />
-AND THEIR WISDOM,<br />
-THAT KING AND THAT PARLIAMENT HAVE<br />
-ERECTED THIS MONUMENT.</span>"<br />
-</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_136_136" id="Footnote_136_136"></a><a href="#FNanchor_136_136"><span class="label">[136]</span></a> It has been generally called a Cheshire cheese. Having never seen
-this pride of the English dairy with a hole bored through the middle,
-I have ventured to pronounce it a millstone.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_137_137" id="Footnote_137_137"></a><a href="#FNanchor_137_137"><span class="label">[137]</span></a> Lord Bute is said to be personified by one of the Highlanders: as
-I cannot ascertain which, my reader must discover it&mdash;if he can. The
-fireman is probably intended for the Duke of Bedford.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_138_138" id="Footnote_138_138"></a><a href="#FNanchor_138_138"><span class="label">[138]</span></a> If Hogarth must be so unmercifully abused for what he inserted,
-he is entitled to some credit for what he erased. I hope this blot in his
-original design will not be considered as an additional blot on his
-escutcheon.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_139_139" id="Footnote_139_139"></a><a href="#FNanchor_139_139"><span class="label">[139]</span></a> The small pyramid upon a little pedestal immediately behind him
-is, I think, an afterthought. It much resembles the ornament inscribed
-"Cyprus," which was painted on Hogarth's chariot, and might possibly
-be intended to carry some allusion to himself, for the stream of
-water from one of the garretteers just touches the point.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_140_140" id="Footnote_140_140"></a><a href="#FNanchor_140_140"><span class="label">[140]</span></a> Hogarth seems to have had a strong antipathy to the politics of
-this year. In later impressions of Plate 8 of "The Rake's Progress"
-will be found a halfpenny with the same date, in which Britannia is
-represented in the character of a maniac, with dishevelled hair, etc.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_141_141" id="Footnote_141_141"></a><a href="#FNanchor_141_141"><span class="label">[141]</span></a> If this sign of the Castle were not inscribed "<em>New</em>castle Inn," we
-should take it for a very old castle indeed. Its being in so ruinous
-a state, the frame shattered, and off one hook, describes the Duke's
-interest at that time. His Grace might be termed a Father of the
-Church, for he had promoted almost every bishop in the kingdom, and
-during the continuance of his administration an archbishop's levee
-could not have a more sable appearance. He resigned, or was turned
-out, which the reader pleaseth; and at his succeeding levee&mdash;there was
-not one ecclesiastic!</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_142_142" id="Footnote_142_142"></a><a href="#FNanchor_142_142"><span class="label">[142]</span></a> Lord Besborough and the Honourable Robert Hampden were, I
-think, joint Postmasters-General this year; a short time after, Lord
-Egmont had the situation of Lord Besborough, but soon resigned.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_143_143" id="Footnote_143_143"></a><a href="#FNanchor_143_143"><span class="label">[143]</span></a> The Prince of Wales was born on the 12th of August 1762. Just
-after her Majesty was safely in her bed, the waggons with the treasure
-of the Hermione entered Saint James's Street, on which the king and
-the nobility went to the window over the palace gate to see them, and
-joined their acclamations on two such joyful occasions. From hence
-the procession, consisting of twenty waggons, etc., proceeded to the
-tower.&mdash;<cite>Annual Register, 1762, Art. August</cite>.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_144_144" id="Footnote_144_144"></a><a href="#FNanchor_144_144"><span class="label">[144]</span></a> In the <cite>London Magazine</cite> for September 1762, I find the following
-explanation:&mdash;
-</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-<p>
-"The subject of this print is, as its title expresses it, 'The Times.'
-The first object is a quarter of the globe on fire, supposed to be Europe;
-and France, Germany, and Spain, denoted by their respective arms,
-are represented in flames, which appear to be extending themselves to
-Great Britain itself. And this desolation is continued and increased by
-Mr. P&mdash;&mdash;, who is represented by the figure of Henry <span class="fs80">VIII.</span>, with a pair
-of bellows blowing up those flames which others are endeavouring to
-extinguish. He is mounted on the stilts of the populace. There is a
-Cheshire cheese hanging between his legs, and round the same '£3000
-per annum.' The manager of the engine-pipe is L&mdash;&mdash; B&mdash;&mdash;, who is
-assisted in working the engine by sailors, English soldiers, and Highlanders;
-but their good offices are impeded by a man with a wheel-barrow,
-overladen with <cite>Monitors</cite> and <cite>North Britons</cite>, brought to be
-thrown in to keep up the flame. The respectable body depictured
-under Mr. P&mdash;&mdash;, are the m&mdash;&mdash; of London, who are worshipping the
-idol they had formerly set up; whilst a German prince, who alone is
-sure to profit by the war, is amusing himself with a violin among his
-miserable countrymen. It is sufficiently apparent who is meant by the
-fine gentleman at the dining-room window of the Temple Coffeehouse,
-who is squirting at the director of the engine-pipe, whilst his garretteers
-are engaged in the same employment. The picture of the Indian alludes
-to the advocates for the retaining our West India conquests, which, they
-say, will only increase excess and debauchery; and the breaking down
-the Newcastle Arms, and the drawing up the patriotic ones, refer to the
-resignation of a noble Duke, and the appointment of a successor. The
-Dutchman smoking his pipe, with a fox peeping out beneath him, the
-emblem of cunning, waiting the issue; the waggon with the treasures of
-the Hermione; the unnecessary marching of the militia, signified by the
-Norfolk jig; the dove with the olive branch; and the miseries of war,
-are obvious, and need no explication."
-</p></div>
-
-<p>
-In a newspaper of the day is the following whimsical description of
-the characters the writer chooses to say were really intended:&mdash;
-</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-<p>
-"The principal figure, in the character of Henry <span class="fs80">VIII.</span>, appears to be
-not Mr. P&mdash;&mdash;, but another person, whose power is signified by his
-bulk of carcase, treading on Mr. P&mdash;&mdash;, represented by 3000. The
-bellows may signify his well-meant though ineffectual endeavours to
-extinguish the fire by wind, which, though it will put out a small flame,
-will cherish a large one. The guider of the engine-pipe I should think
-can only mean his M&mdash;&mdash;, who unweariedly tries, by a more proper
-method, to stop the flames of war, in which he is assisted by all his
-good subjects both by sea and land, notwithstanding any interruption
-from <cite>Auditors</cite> or <cite>Britons</cite>, <cite>Monitors</cite> or <cite>North Britons</cite>. The respectable
-body at the bottom can never mean the magistrates of London: Mr.
-H&mdash;&mdash; has more sense than to abuse so respectable a body. Much less
-can it mean the judges. I think it may as likely be the Court of Session
-in Scotland, either in the attitude of adoration, or with outspread arms,
-intending to catch their patron should his stilts give way. The
-Frenchman may very well sit at his ease among his miserable countrywomen,
-as he is not unacquainted that France has always gained by
-negotiating what she lost in fighting. The fine gentleman at the window,
-with his garretteers, and the barrow of periodical papers, refers
-to the present contending parties of every denomination. The breaking
-of the Newcastle Arms alludes to the resignation of a great personage;
-and the replacing of them by the sign of the Four Clenched Fists may
-be thought emblematical of the great economy of his successor. The
-Norfolk jig signifies in a lively manner the alacrity of all his Majesty's
-forces during the war; and G. T. (George Townshend) <i lang="la" xml:lang="la">fecit</i>, is an opportune
-compliment paid to Lord Townshend, who, in conjunction with
-Mr. Wyndham, published <cite>A Plan of Discipline for the use of the Norfolk
-Militia</cite>, quarto, and had been the greatest advocate for the establishment
-of our present militia. The picture of the Indian alive from America,
-is a satire on our late uncivilised behaviour to the three chiefs of the
-Cherokee nation who were lately in this kingdom, and the bags of
-money set this in a still clearer point of view, signifying the sums gained
-by showing them at our public gardens. The sly Dutchman with his
-pipe seems pleased with the combustion, from which he thinks he shall
-be a gainer; and the Duke of Nivernois, under the figure of a dove, is
-coming from France to give a cessation of hostilities to Europe."</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_145_145" id="Footnote_145_145"></a><a href="#FNanchor_145_145"><span class="label">[145]</span></a> In the first impressions, considering Mr. Pitt as a tyrant, he introduced
-him in the character of Henry <span class="fs80">VIII.</span>; this was afterwards properly
-altered.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_146_146" id="Footnote_146_146"></a><a href="#FNanchor_146_146"><span class="label">[146]</span></a> "There are strong prejudices in favour of straight lines, as constituting
-true beauty in the human form, where they never should
-appear. A middling connoisseur thinks no profile has beauty without
-a very straight nose; and if the forehead be continued straight with it,
-he thinks it is still more sublime. The common notion that a person
-should be straight as an arrow, and perfectly erect, is of this kind. If a
-dancing-master were to see his scholar in the easy and gracefully turned
-attitude of the Antinous, he would cry shame on him, and tell him he
-looked as crooked as a ram's horn, and bid him hold up his head as he
-himself did."&mdash;<cite>Preface to the Analysis of Beauty</cite>, p. 8.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_147_147" id="Footnote_147_147"></a><a href="#FNanchor_147_147"><span class="label">[147]</span></a> Of Ramsay's manner, Churchill had an opinion similar to Hogarth's.
-Speaking of Scotland, he says,
-</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container"><div class="poetry">
-<p class="verseq">"From thence the Ramsays, men of 'special note,</p>
-<p class="verse">Of whom one paints as well as t'other wrote."</p>
-<p class="verse"></p>
-<p class="verse16">&mdash;<cite>Prophecy of Famine.</cite></p>
-</div></div>
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_148_148" id="Footnote_148_148"></a><a href="#FNanchor_148_148"><span class="label">[148]</span></a> The British Lion seems by no means delighted at the distribution
-he is forced to make. The strong arm, drawing a long lever, has
-distorted his mouth, and, though gagged, his wry face shows his agony.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_149_149" id="Footnote_149_149"></a><a href="#FNanchor_149_149"><span class="label">[149]</span></a> Among the admirable things recorded as Mr. Wilkes' jests, is a
-remark upon this same <em>red</em> book: "Sir, it is the only book now red"
-(<em>read</em>).</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_150_150" id="Footnote_150_150"></a><a href="#FNanchor_150_150"><span class="label">[150]</span></a> See the <cite>North Briton</cite>.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_151_151" id="Footnote_151_151"></a><a href="#FNanchor_151_151"><span class="label">[151]</span></a> As a paint-pot and brushes are placed in the corner, it is supposed
-Hogarth intended to represent Himself as one of the group: perhaps
-this may be the figure.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_152_152" id="Footnote_152_152"></a><a href="#FNanchor_152_152"><span class="label">[152]</span></a> The porter with his knot upon his head, and a pipe in his mouth,
-leans against the pillory.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_153_153" id="Footnote_153_153"></a><a href="#FNanchor_153_153"><span class="label">[153]</span></a> Let it be observed, that in this, as well as in many more of Mr.
-Hogarth's prints, the buildings are reversed: in the drawing from
-whence the engraving was made they were right.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_154_154" id="Footnote_154_154"></a><a href="#FNanchor_154_154"><span class="label">[154]</span></a> To be told that I am wrong in some of their names will not surprise
-me. The figure presenting a snuff-box, I judged to be Earl Temple,
-from his face having been originally etched without features, and a nose
-and chin added. Another with a riband, whose back only is seen, from
-its similarity to an engraving after the design of a noble marquis, I
-have denominated Lord Winchelsea. A higher figure, on his left hand,
-is possibly the Duke of Bedford; the interrogating profile, with a hat
-on, somewhat lower, has the air of Mr. Rigby.<a name="FNanchor_155_155" id="FNanchor_155_155"></a><a href="#Footnote_155_155" class="fnanchor">[155]</a> I have conjectured
-that a gentleman remarkably rotund is intended for Lord Melcombe;
-the noble lord beneath him may be designed for the Duke of Devonshire;
-and the grave senator in spectacles, above the ear-trumpet, is
-perhaps Earl Bath.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_155_155" id="Footnote_155_155"></a><a href="#FNanchor_155_155"><span class="label">[155]</span></a> The rail, which I have said was perhaps intended to divide the
-Commons from the Lords, might yet be designed to divide the men
-most active in the Opposition from the Ministry. To either supposition
-there are objections which I cannot solve.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_156_156" id="Footnote_156_156"></a><a href="#FNanchor_156_156"><span class="label">[156]</span></a> A man in a porter-house, classing himself as an eminent literary
-character, was asked by one of his companions what right he had to
-assume such a title? the reply was remarkable: "Sir, I'd have you
-know, I had the honour of chalking Number 45 upon every door
-between Temple Bar and Hyde Park Corner."</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_157_157" id="Footnote_157_157"></a><a href="#FNanchor_157_157"><span class="label">[157]</span></a> The public must certainly have had the same opinion, for at that
-period Mr. Wilkes was in the meridian of his popularity. Though not
-exactly like Gay's hare in the fable, he had many friends, and Mr.
-Nichols relates, that a copperplate printer informed him near four
-thousand copies of this etching were worked off in a few weeks. These
-must necessarily have been sold, and we may naturally infer were
-bought by his friends.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_158_158" id="Footnote_158_158"></a><a href="#FNanchor_158_158"><span class="label">[158]</span></a> Equally memorable was his reply to a friend who requested him to
-sit to Sir Joshua Reynolds, and have his portrait placed in Guildhall,
-being then so popular a character that the Court of Aldermen would
-willingly have paid the expense. "No," replied he, "No! they shall
-never have a delineation of my face, that will carry to posterity so
-damning a proof of what it was. Who knows but a time may come
-when some future Horace Walpole will treat the world with another
-quarto volume of historic doubts, in which he may prove that the
-numerous squinting portraits on tobacco papers and halfpenny ballads,
-inscribed with the name of John Wilkes, are 'a weak invention of the
-enemy,' for that I was not only unlike them, but, if any inference can
-be drawn from the general partiality of the fair sex, the handsomest man
-of the age I lived in."</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_159_159" id="Footnote_159_159"></a><a href="#FNanchor_159_159"><span class="label">[159]</span></a> If Hogarth at first intended it for a caricature, who knows but the
-old lion might have repented himself, for he afterwards threw the
-original drawing into the fire; it was snatched out by Mrs. Lewis.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_160_160" id="Footnote_160_160"></a><a href="#FNanchor_160_160"><span class="label">[160]</span></a> That Hogarth should be unseen by all, and yet seen by Virtue, if
-not a blunder, is very nearly allied to it.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_161_161" id="Footnote_161_161"></a><a href="#FNanchor_161_161"><span class="label">[161]</span></a> This remark extends no further than to the figure of Churchill. In
-the little design on a palette, which was added some time after the print
-was published, there is much wit.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_162_162" id="Footnote_162_162"></a><a href="#FNanchor_162_162"><span class="label">[162]</span></a> These angry strains had, I suppose, their origin in Hogarth having
-on some occasion charged Churchill with falsehood. The accusation
-might probably allude to personal satire, and the bard's warmest admirers
-must admit, that though his characters are highly drawn, and still more
-highly coloured, they are rather political than historical, rather poetical
-than biographical. An uneducated painter, who had not taste enough
-to conceive that poetry, however animated, could make that truth
-which he knew to be falsehood, might possibly give his opinion in very
-displeasing terms.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_163_163" id="Footnote_163_163"></a><a href="#FNanchor_163_163"><span class="label">[163]</span></a> Porter was the poet's favourite beverage; but though he quaffed
-more <em>entire butt than bard beseems</em>, he drank still deeper draughts from
-the fountain of Helicon. Many of his stanzas breathe inspiration.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_164_164" id="Footnote_164_164"></a><a href="#FNanchor_164_164"><span class="label">[164]</span></a> Much wretched writing, in both verse and prose, concerning this
-contest between the pencil and the pen, was inserted in the prints of the
-day. The following explanation, indifferent as it may be thought, is
-the best I happen to have seen:&mdash;
-</p>
-<p>
-"The bear with a tattered band represents the former strength and
-abilities of Mr. Hogarth; the full pot of beer likewise shows that he
-was in a land of plenty. The stump of a headless tree, with the
-notches, and on it written 'Lie,' signifies Mr. Hogarth's former art, and
-the many productions thereof, wherein he has excelled even nature
-itself, and which of course must be but lies, flattery, and fallacy, the
-painter's prerogative; and the stump of a tree only being left, shows
-that there can be no more fruit expected from thence, but that it only
-stands as a record of his former services. The butcher's dog trampling
-on Mr. Churchill's Epistle alludes to the present state of Mr. Hogarth,
-who is now reduced from the strength of a bear to a blind butcher's dog,
-not able to distinguish, but degrading, his best friends; or perhaps
-giving the public a hint to read that Epistle, where his case is more fully
-laid before them. The next matter to be explained is the subscription-box,
-and under it is a book said to contain <em>A List of Subscribers to the
-North Briton</em>, as well as one of <em>A New Way to Pay Old Debts</em>. Mr.
-Hogarth mentioned the <cite>North Briton</cite> to avoid the censure of the rabble
-in the street, who he knew would neither pity nor relieve him; and as
-Mr. Churchill was reputed to be the writer of that paper, it would seem
-to give a colour in their eyes of its being intended against Mr. Churchill.
-Mr. Hogarth meant only to show his necessity, and that a book entitled
-<em>A List of Subscribers to the North Briton</em> contained in fact a list of
-those who should contribute to the support of Mr. Hogarth in old age.
-By the book entitled <em>A New Way to Pay Old Debts</em>, he can only
-mean this, that when a man is become disabled to get his livelihood
-and much in debt, the only shift he has left is to go a-begging to his
-creditors.
-</p>
-<p>
-"There are likewise in this print some of his old tools, without any
-hand to use them."</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_165_165" id="Footnote_165_165"></a><a href="#FNanchor_165_165"><span class="label">[165]</span></a> This thought might possibly be suggested by one of Shakspeare's
-witches:
-</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container"><div class="poetry">
-<p class="verse4">"Sleep shall neither night nor day</p>
-<p class="verse">Hang upon his pent-house lid,</p>
-<p class="verse">He shall live a man forbid," etc.</p>
-</div></div>
-
-<p>
-How admirable a contrast is formed by Robert Lloyd's description
-of an opposite character!
-</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container"><div class="poetry">
-<p class="verseq">"Dull folly,&mdash;not the wanton wild,</p>
-<p class="verse">Imagination's younger child,</p>
-<p class="verse">Had taken lodgings in his face,</p>
-<p class="verse">As finding that a vacant place."</p>
-</div></div>
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_166_166" id="Footnote_166_166"></a><a href="#FNanchor_166_166"><span class="label">[166]</span></a> "Little did the sportive satirist imagine that the power of pleasing
-was so soon to cease in both! Hogarth died in four weeks after the
-publication of this poem, and Churchill survived him but nine days.
-In some lines which were printed in November 1764, the compiler of
-these anecdotes took occasion to lament that
-</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container"><div class="poetry">
-<p class="verse8">"'Scarce had the friendly tear,</p>
-<p class="verse">For Hogarth shed, escap'd the generous eye</p>
-<p class="verse">Of feeling pity, when again it flow'd</p>
-<p class="verse">For Churchill's fate. Ill can we bear the loss</p>
-<p class="verse">Of Fancy's twin-born offspring, close allied</p>
-<p class="verse">In energy of thought, though different paths</p>
-<p class="verse">They sought for fame!&mdash;Though jarring passions sway'd</p>
-<p class="verse">The living artists, let the funeral wreath</p>
-<p class="verse">Unite their memory!'"</p>
-<p class="verse"></p>
-<p class="verse10">&mdash;<cite>Nichols' Biographical Anecdotes of Hogarth.</cite></p>
-</div></div>
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_167_167" id="Footnote_167_167"></a><a href="#FNanchor_167_167"><span class="label">[167]</span></a> In Mr. Churchill's will was the following item:&mdash;
-</p>
-<p>
-"I desire my dear friend John Wilkes, Esq., to collect and publish
-my works, with the remarks and explanations he has prepared, and any
-other he thinks proper to make."
-</p>
-<p>
-Could Mr. Churchill really think it was possible that notes by Mr.
-Wilkes, or any other man, would justify his malignant attack upon
-Hogarth?</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_168_168" id="Footnote_168_168"></a><a href="#FNanchor_168_168"><span class="label">[168]</span></a> What a satire upon himself! What an apology for Hogarth's print!</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_169_169" id="Footnote_169_169"></a><a href="#FNanchor_169_169"><span class="label">[169]</span></a> This is a very singular acknowledgment: it is, I believe, the first
-instance of a person feeling himself flattered at being told that he had
-murdered an old man.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_170_170" id="Footnote_170_170"></a><a href="#FNanchor_170_170"><span class="label">[170]</span></a> He frequently engraved a ticket for one series of prints, and presented
-it with another.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_171_171" id="Footnote_171_171"></a><a href="#FNanchor_171_171"><span class="label">[171]</span></a> See the engraved title-page to vol. ii.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_172_172" id="Footnote_172_172"></a><a href="#FNanchor_172_172"><span class="label">[172]</span></a> In the reduced copy I have ventured to abridge this title, though
-the very ingenious baptisms of sundry modern prints would have given
-ample countenance to the old inscription. For example: A girl hugging
-a dog in her arms is, with great attention to analogy, called
-"Nature;" and a woman with a large mallet in one hand, and a
-tenpenny nail in the other, "Art."
-</p>
-<p>
-A female with a consumptive curd-and-whey countenance, that would
-not have got her a lover even in Otaheite, they have miscalled "Beauty;"
-and a little gorged misshapen boy, with swollen cheeks, and a bow and
-arrow, they kindly inform you is "Love."
-</p>
-<p>
-A farmer's daughter with a basket on her arm, in which are two
-pigeons quarrelling for a straw, and drawing it different ways, is
-christened "Conjugal Peace;" and a very picturesque landscape, with
-a crowd of figures in the background, baptized "Solitude!"
-</p>
-<p>
-Innumerable other instances might be given; but these are sufficient
-to prove, that in erroneous inscription Hogarth is not alone.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_173_173" id="Footnote_173_173"></a><a href="#FNanchor_173_173"><span class="label">[173]</span></a> This good gentleman was undoubtedly designed to place his hand
-upon his heart; but Hogarth had either heard of some examples similar
-to one which was lately seen at Dr. John Hunter's, or has, as in many
-other instances, reversed the drawing.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_174_174" id="Footnote_174_174"></a><a href="#FNanchor_174_174"><span class="label">[174]</span></a> The Countess Spencer, who has dignified the arts by making several
-very elegant drawings, has given a sanction to this baptism in a print
-lately engraved by Bartolozzi.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_175_175" id="Footnote_175_175"></a><a href="#FNanchor_175_175"><span class="label">[175]</span></a> The pit was formerly the seat of the critics, and dread of authors;
-our critics of the present day have <em>taken to</em> the green boxes.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_176_176" id="Footnote_176_176"></a><a href="#FNanchor_176_176"><span class="label">[176]</span></a> The father of Huggins was warden of the Fleet Prison, and in that
-office guilty of extortion, cruelty, breach of trust, and many other
-crimes; he accumulated a considerable fortune, and died at ninety
-years of age. His son William was educated for holy orders, and sent
-to Magdalen College, Oxford, where he took the degree of M.A., but
-on the death of his elder brother gave up all thoughts of entering into
-the church. In 1757 some flattering verses were addressed to him on
-his version of Ariosto: they are preserved in the <cite>Gentleman's Magazine</cite>,
-vol. xxvii. p. 180; but, except by the author and the person to whom
-they are written, were probably never read through. A specimen of
-his translation from Dante, which was published in the <cite>British Magazine</cite>
-for 1760, exhibits an unequivocal proof that Mr. Huggins was worthy
-of his encomiast. He died the 2d of July 1761, and left to posterity
-a <span class="fs80">MS.</span> tragedy, a <span class="fs80">MS.</span> translation of Dante, a <span class="fs80">MS.</span> farce, and though last,
-not least in estimation&mdash;two thousand pounds per annum.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_177_177" id="Footnote_177_177"></a><a href="#FNanchor_177_177"><span class="label">[177]</span></a> He was a respectable performer on the violin, some years chapelmaster
-at Antwerp, and several seasons leader of the band at Marybone
-Gardens. He published a collection of musical compositions, to
-which was annexed a portrait of himself, characterized by three lines
-from Milton:
-</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container"><div class="poetry">
-<p class="verseq">"Thou honour'dst verse, and verse must lend her wing</p>
-<p class="verse">To honour thee, the priest of Phœbus' quire,</p>
-<p class="verse">That tun'st her happiest lines in hymn or song."</p>
-</div></div>
-
-<p>
-He died in 1750, aged seventy years, and gives one additional name
-to a catalogue I have somewhere seen of very old professors of music,
-who, saith my author, "generally live unto a greater age than persons
-in any other way of life, from their souls being so attuned unto harmony,
-that they enjoy a perpetual peace of mind." It has been observed, and
-I believe justly, that thinking is a great enemy to longevity, and that,
-consequently, they who think least will be likely to live longest. The
-quantity of thought necessary to make an adept in this divine science
-must be determined by those who have studied it.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_178_178" id="Footnote_178_178"></a><a href="#FNanchor_178_178"><span class="label">[178]</span></a> In thus bringing to shame the ignorant or prejudiced audience who
-could be blind to his genius, he hath been right worthily imitated by
-sundry great writers in this our day.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_179_179" id="Footnote_179_179"></a><a href="#FNanchor_179_179"><span class="label">[179]</span></a> I once saw the following <span class="fs80">MS.</span> note in the marginal leaf of this
-oratorio: "If the writer of this <ins class="corr" title="Transcriber's Note&mdash;Original text: 'had his deserts'">had his desserts</ins>,
-</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container"><div class="poetry">
-<p class="verseq">"Full soon would injur'd Judith slay him,</p>
-<p class="verse">Or pious Jael, Siser-a him."</p>
-</div></div>
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_180_180" id="Footnote_180_180"></a><a href="#FNanchor_180_180"><span class="label">[180]</span></a> At a time when Doctor Shippen, I mean the astronomical Shippen,
-was principal of Brazennose College, the musical professor died, and
-the Doctor offered himself as a candidate for the place. To the science
-he was a total stranger, but by strength of interest carried the election,
-though opposed by a gentleman highly eminent for his musical abilities.
-</p>
-<p>
-In less than twelve moons the professor of astronomy died, and the
-electors, ashamed of their former conduct, went in a body to the
-musical gentleman they had before rejected, and offered him the vacant
-astronomical chair. He was weak enough to refuse; because, forsooth,
-he did not understand astronomy, and died without place, pension, or
-university honour.
-</p>
-<p>
-Even now these things are managed in much the same way. A
-nobleman who had the privilege of appointing a chorister to Christ
-Church, Cambridge, sent them one who was not only ignorant of music,
-but croaked like an old raven, because the fellow had a vote for a
-Huntingdonshire borough. This gave rise to the following epigram:&mdash;
-</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container"><div class="poetry">
-<p class="verseq">"A singing man, and cannot sing!</p>
-<p class="verse4">From whence arose your patron's bounty?</p>
-<p class="verse">Give us a song!&mdash;Excuse me, sir,</p>
-<p class="verse4">My voice is in another county."</p>
-</div></div>
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_181_181" id="Footnote_181_181"></a><a href="#FNanchor_181_181"><span class="label">[181]</span></a> "A chief betokeneth a senatour, or honourable personage, borrowed
-from the Greek, and is a word signifying a head; and as the head is
-the chief part in a man, so the chief in the escocheon should be a reward
-of such only, whose high merites have procured them chief places,
-esteem, or love amongst men."&mdash;<span class="smcap">Guillim.</span></p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_182_182" id="Footnote_182_182"></a><a href="#FNanchor_182_182"><span class="label">[182]</span></a> "The bearing of clouds in armes (saith Upton) doth import some
-excellencie."</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_183_183" id="Footnote_183_183"></a><a href="#FNanchor_183_183"><span class="label">[183]</span></a> Originally printed <em>docter</em>, but altered.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_184_184" id="Footnote_184_184"></a><a href="#FNanchor_184_184"><span class="label">[184]</span></a> One of them, but I know not which, is said to be intended for
-Doctor Pierce Dod, physician to St. Bartholomew's Hospital, who died
-August 6, 1754. Another for Doctor Bamber, a celebrated anatomist,
-physician, and accoucheur, to whose estate the present Gascoyne family
-succeeded, and by whose surname two of them have been baptized.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_185_185" id="Footnote_185_185"></a><a href="#FNanchor_185_185"><span class="label">[185]</span></a> When very young, I was once in company with the Chevalier at
-the house of a Doctor Cheyne Harte, in Shrewsbury, and I remember
-his person having a strong resemblance to this print. I also recollect
-that he carried his gold, silver, and copper coin in his coat pocket. He
-had uncommon skill in his profession, but was ridiculously ostentatious,
-and is said to have expended near a thousand guineas in a set of gold
-instruments. At this species of foppery Hogarth has well hinted, in
-the laced or Dresden ruffles with which he alone is decorated. His
-portrait was painted at Rome by the Chevalier Riche. Beneath it is
-the following inscription: "Joannes Taylor, Medicus in Optica expertissimus,
-multisque in Academiis celeberrimis Socius."</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_186_186" id="Footnote_186_186"></a><a href="#FNanchor_186_186"><span class="label">[186]</span></a> To this volume there is the longest title I remember to have seen:
-it might serve for a table of contents; and containing a sort of brief
-abstract of his adventures, I have inserted it:&mdash;
-</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>"<cite>The Life and Extraordinary History of Chevalier John Taylor</cite>, Member
-of the most celebrated Academies, Universities, and Societies of the
-learned&mdash;Chevalier in several of the first courts of the world&mdash;illustrious
-(by patent) in the apartments of many of the greatest Princes,<a name="FNanchor_187_187" id="FNanchor_187_187"></a><a href="#Footnote_187_187" class="fnanchor">[187]</a>
-Ophthalmiater Pontifical, Imperial, and Royal&mdash;to his late Majesty&mdash;to
-the Pontifical Court&mdash;to the Person of her Imperial Majesty&mdash;to the
-Kings of Poland, Denmark, Sweden, etc.&mdash;to the several Electors of
-the Holy Empire&mdash;to the Royal Infant Duke of Parma&mdash;to the Prince
-of Saxe-Gotha, Serenissime, brother to her Royal Highness the Princess
-Dowager of Wales&mdash;to the Prince Royal of Poland&mdash;to the late Prince
-of Orange&mdash;to the present princes of Bavaria, Modena, Lorraine,
-Brunswick, Anspach, Bareith, Liege, Salzbourg, Middlebourg, Hesse
-Cassel, Holstein, Zerbst, Georgia, etc.&mdash;Citizen of Rome, by a public
-act in the name of the senate and people&mdash;Fellow of that College of
-Physicians&mdash;Professor in Optics&mdash;Doctor in Medicine, and Doctor in
-Chirurgery, in several universities abroad; who has been on his travels
-upwards of thirty years, with little or no interruption, during which he
-has not only been several times in every town in these kingdoms, but in
-every kingdom, province, state, and city of the least consideration&mdash;in
-every court,<a name="FNanchor_188_188" id="FNanchor_188_188"></a><a href="#Footnote_188_188" class="fnanchor">[188]</a> presented to every crowned head and sovereign prince in
-all Europe, without exception: containing the greatest variety of the
-most entertaining and interesting adventures, that, it is presumed, has
-ever yet been published in any country or in any language."</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_187_187" id="Footnote_187_187"></a><a href="#FNanchor_187_187"><span class="label">[187]</span></a> When he was once enumerating the honours he had received
-from the different princes of Europe, and the orders with which he
-had been dignified by innumerable sovereigns, a gentleman present remarked
-that he had not named the King of Prussia; and added, "I
-suppose, sir, he never gave you any order?" "You are mistaken,
-sir," replied the Chevalier: "he gave me a very peremptory order
-to quit his dominions."</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_188_188" id="Footnote_188_188"></a><a href="#FNanchor_188_188"><span class="label">[188]</span></a> On his return from a tour on the Continent, he once met a plain
-man, who, addressing him with great familiarity, was repulsed with a
-cold formal frown,&mdash;and, "Sir, I really don't remember you." "Not
-remember me! why, my goodness, Doctor! we both lodged on one floor
-in Round Court." "Round Court,&mdash;Round Court,&mdash;Round Court?&mdash;Sir,
-I have been in every court in Europe, but of such a court as
-Round Court I have no recollection."</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_189_189" id="Footnote_189_189"></a><a href="#FNanchor_189_189"><span class="label">[189]</span></a> <em>September 16, 1736.</em> "On Thursday Mrs. Mapp's plate of ten
-guineas was run for at Epsom. A mare, called Mrs. Mapp, won the
-first heat, when Mrs. Mapp gave the rider a guinea, and swore, if he
-won the plate she would give him a hundred."
-</p>
-<p>
-<em>September 23, 1736.</em> "Mrs. Mapp continues making extraordinary
-cures: she has now set up an equipage, and on Sunday waited on her
-Majesty."
-</p>
-<p>
-<em>October 19, 1736, London Daily Post.</em> "Mrs. Mapp being present at
-the acting of <cite>The Wife's Relief</cite>, concurred in the universal applause of
-a crowded audience. This play was advertised by the desire of Mrs.
-Mapp, the famous bone-setter from Epsom."
-</p>
-<p>
-<em>October 21, 1736.</em> "On Saturday evening there was such a concourse
-of people at the Theatre Royal in Lincoln's-Inn Fields to see the famous
-Mrs. Mapp, that several ladies and gentlemen were obliged to return
-for want of room. The confusion at going out was so great, that several
-ladies and gentlemen had their pockets picked, and many of the former
-lost their fans, etc. Yesterday she was elegantly entertained by Doctor
-Ward, at his house in Pall Mall."
-</p>
-<p>
-"On Saturday, and yesterday, Mrs. Mapp performed several operations
-at the Grecian Coffeehouse, particularly one upon a niece of Sir
-Hans Sloane,<a name="FNanchor_190_190" id="FNanchor_190_190"></a><a href="#Footnote_190_190" class="fnanchor">[190]</a> to his great satisfaction, and her credit. The patient
-had her shoulder-bone out for about nine years."
-</p>
-<p>
-<em>December 22, 1737.</em> "Died last week, at her lodgings near Seven
-Dials, the much talked of Mrs. Mapp, the bone-setter, so miserably
-poor, that the parish was obliged to bury her."</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_190_190" id="Footnote_190_190"></a><a href="#FNanchor_190_190"><span class="label">[190]</span></a> I have heard it suggested that this harlequin figure, received as Mrs.
-Mapp, was really intended for Sir Hans Sloane.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_191_191" id="Footnote_191_191"></a><a href="#FNanchor_191_191"><span class="label">[191]</span></a> He was originally in partnership with his brother, a drysalter in
-Thames Street. By a fire which broke out in an adjoining house, their
-joint property was destroyed, and Mr. Ward escaped by clambering
-over the tops of several houses in his shirt.
-</p>
-<p>
-In the year 1717 he was returned member for Marlborough, but by
-a vote of the House of Commons declared not duly elected. It is
-imagined that he was in some manner connected with his brother John
-Ward (immortalized by Mr Pope) in the South Sea Bubble, for he left
-England rather abruptly; and during his residence abroad, is supposed
-to have turned Roman Catholic.
-</p>
-<p>
-It was during his exile that he acquired such a knowledge of medicine
-and chemistry as was afterwards the means of raising him to a state of
-affluence. About the year 1733 he began to practise physic, and combated
-for some time the united efforts of argument, jealousy, and ridicule,
-by each of which he was opposed. By some lucky cures, and particularly
-one on a relation of Sir Joseph Jekyl, Master of the Rolls, he
-triumphed over his enemies; was, by a vote of the House of Commons,
-exempted from being visited by the censors of the college, and called
-in to the assistance of George the Second, whose hand he cured; and
-in lieu of a pecuniary compensation, was, at his own request, permitted
-to ride in his gaudy and heavy equipage through St. James's Park, an
-honour seldom granted to any but persons of rank. Besides this, the
-King gave a commission to his nephew, the late General Gansel.
-</p>
-<p>
-He distributed medicine and advice to the poor gratis. There is as
-bad a print as I have seen representing him thus employed. By such
-conduct he acquired great popularity, and was, indeed, entitled to great
-praise.
-</p>
-<p>
-He died December 21, 1761, at a very advanced age, and left the
-receipts for compounding his medicines to Mr. Page, member for
-Chichester, who bestowed them on two charitable institutions, which
-have derived considerable advantage from the profits attending their sale.
-</p>
-<p>
-In the <cite>London Chronicle</cite> for February 27, 1762, is the following
-intimation:&mdash;
-</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-<p>
-"A monument is going to be erected in Westminster Abbey, next
-to that of Mr. Dryden's, to the memory of Joshua Ward, of Whitehall,
-Esq., on which will be placed a fine bust of the deceased, that had been
-long in his possession."</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_192_192" id="Footnote_192_192"></a><a href="#FNanchor_192_192"><span class="label">[192]</span></a> The veil which was then spread over this science has been partly
-removed by the publication of Doctor Buchan's <cite>Domestic Medicine</cite>,&mdash;a
-treatise which I have frequently heard reprobated by gentlemen of the
-Faculty, for laying open to the world, in language so perspicuous, those
-mysterious secrets which had been before disguised in dog Latin: it
-has, however, gone through more editions than any book in this language,
-except <cite>Robinson Crusoe</cite> and the <cite>Pilgrim's Progress</cite>.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_193_193" id="Footnote_193_193"></a><a href="#FNanchor_193_193"><span class="label">[193]</span></a> The poet, in this instance, laboureth under a mistake; for I am
-informed by a gentleman learned in the law, that if a physician neglecteth
-to receive his fees, and his patient recovereth, he hath no legal
-claim, neither will an action lie; but if his patient dieth, an action
-against the executors is good: the Court will admit the claim, and the
-jury find a verdict, with full costs of suit.
-</p>
-<p>
-This is very proper, and proveth that <em>law</em> and <em>equity</em> are the same;
-and that if a physician <em>doth his business</em>, he can recover his reward;
-but if he neglecteth, and <em>his patient doth not die</em>, why should he have
-any remuneration?</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_194_194" id="Footnote_194_194"></a><a href="#FNanchor_194_194"><span class="label">[194]</span></a> What caricature is in painting, burlesque is in writing; and in
-the same manner the comic writer and painter correlate to each other.
-But here I shall observe, that as in the former the painter seems to
-have the advantage, so it is in the latter infinitely on the side of the
-writer; for the monstrous is much easier to paint than describe, and
-the ridiculous to describe than paint. And though perhaps this latter
-species doth not in either science so strongly affect and agitate the
-muscles as the other, yet it will be owned, I believe, that a more
-rational and useful pleasure arises to us from it.
-</p>
-<p>
-"He who should call the ingenious Hogarth a burlesque painter,
-would, in my opinion, do him very little honour; for sure it is much
-easier, much less the subject of admiration, to paint a man with a nose or
-any other feature of a monstrous size, or to expose him in some absurd
-or monstrous attitude, than to express the affections of men on canvas.
-It has been thought a vast commendation of a painter to say, his figures
-seem to breathe; but surely it is a much greater and nobler applause,
-that they appear to think."
-</p>
-<p>
-This is Fielding's opinion, and the <em>fiat</em> of such a writer ought to have
-great weight; for his characters and Hogarth's pictures are drawn
-from the same source.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_195_195" id="Footnote_195_195"></a><a href="#FNanchor_195_195"><span class="label">[195]</span></a> I have adhered to Hogarth's orthography.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_196_196" id="Footnote_196_196"></a><a href="#FNanchor_196_196"><span class="label">[196]</span></a> She was suspected to have been concerned in the murder of Mr.
-Nesbit in 1729, near Drury Lane, for which one Kelly, <em>alias</em> Owen,
-suffered death. The only ground of his conviction was a bloodied
-razor, that was known to be his property, being found under the
-murdered man's head. Kelly died protesting his innocence, and
-solemnly asserted that he had lent the razor to a woman whose name
-and habitation he did not know.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_197_197" id="Footnote_197_197"></a><a href="#FNanchor_197_197"><span class="label">[197]</span></a> It appeared on the trial that Mrs. Duncombe had only fifty-four
-pounds in her box; and fifty-three pounds eleven shillings and sixpence
-were found upon Malcolm.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_198_198" id="Footnote_198_198"></a><a href="#FNanchor_198_198"><span class="label">[198]</span></a> One part of her defence was, it must be acknowledged, rather
-weak: she declared that seventeen pounds of the money found in her
-hair was sent to her by her father; but on inquiry, it was proved that
-he lived in a state of extreme and pitiable poverty in the city of Dublin,
-where she was born.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_199_199" id="Footnote_199_199"></a><a href="#FNanchor_199_199"><span class="label">[199]</span></a> The crowd was so great, that a Mrs. Strangeways, who lived in
-Fleet Street, near Serjeants' Inn, crossed the street from her own
-house to Mrs. Coulthurst's, on the opposite side of the way, over the
-heads and shoulders of the populace.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_200_200" id="Footnote_200_200"></a><a href="#FNanchor_200_200"><span class="label">[200]</span></a> This paper he sold for twenty pounds; and the substance of it
-was printed in the <cite>Gentleman's Magazine</cite> for 1733. Peddington died
-September 18, 1734.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_201_201" id="Footnote_201_201"></a><a href="#FNanchor_201_201"><span class="label">[201]</span></a> The late Mr. Barry, whose works are an honour to his age and
-country, and would alone give celebrity and immortality to the English
-school, in his picture of "Elysium," or the state of final retribution,
-has introduced Sir Isaac Newton looking at the solar system, which
-an angel is to him uncovering. This is one of the most sublime and
-poetical thoughts I ever saw expressed upon canvas.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_202_202" id="Footnote_202_202"></a><a href="#FNanchor_202_202"><span class="label">[202]</span></a> That his conquests have in their consequences rendered the people
-he subdued unhappy, must be admitted, and is to be lamented.
-Though I am inclined to suspect that the narrations of Bartholomew
-de las Casas, and some other writers, are greatly exaggerated, we have
-indisputable evidence of such oppression, murder, and massacre, as
-must make every reader shudder. If the same system is still pursued,&mdash;and
-I fear it has been but little softened,&mdash;the evil will correct itself; and
-who will not rejoice at the total extirpation of these merciless tyrants, and
-emancipation of that unhappy race whom they have so long enslaved?
-Let us not, from this, censure the extension of commerce, or civilisation
-of the savage; for both these great objects ultimately tend to make
-men wiser, better, and happier. To the beardless philosopher, who
-adopts the fascinating visions of Rousseau, is an advocate for the
-blessings of barbarism, and contends for the superiority of the savage
-to the civilised animal, I earnestly recommend the perusal of Mickle's
-<cite>Introduction to the Lusiad</cite>. If the arguments adduced by that excellent
-writer&mdash;and, from intimate personal knowledge, I venture to add,
-excellent man&mdash;will not convince him, and he still languishes for pathless
-wilds, let him retreat from civilised society to the frozen rocks of
-Kamtschatka, or join the Aborigines of New Holland.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_203_203" id="Footnote_203_203"></a><a href="#FNanchor_203_203"><span class="label">[203]</span></a> "When he promised a new hemisphere, it was insisted upon that
-no such hemisphere could exist; and when he had discovered it, asserted
-that it had been known long before. The honour was given to the
-Carthaginians; and, to prove they deserved it, a book of Aristotle's was
-quoted, which Aristole never wrote. It was further said, that one
-Martin Behem went from Nuremburg to the Straits of Magellan, in
-1460, with a patent from the Duchess of Burgundy, who, as she was
-not alive at that time, could not issue patents."&mdash;<span class="smcap">Voltaire.</span></p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_204_204" id="Footnote_204_204"></a><a href="#FNanchor_204_204"><span class="label">[204]</span></a> Some authors have said from the port of Gomera, and dated his
-departure on the 6th of September. This <em>momentous</em> point must be
-decided by those who study minute chronology; and we are so fortunate
-as to live in the same age with a writer who can determine the day of
-the month and day of the week when Adam was created:
-</p>
-<p>
-"Adam created, Friday, October 28, 4004; died, 3034 before Christ,
-aged 930."&mdash;Trusler's <cite>Chronology</cite>.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_205_205" id="Footnote_205_205"></a><a href="#FNanchor_205_205"><span class="label">[205]</span></a> Americus Vespucius, a merchant of Florence, had the honour of
-giving his name to this new half of the globe, in which he did not
-possess one acre of land; and pretended to be the first who discovered
-the continent. Admitting it true that he first discovered it, the glory
-is due to the man who had the penetration to see that the voyage was
-practicable, and the courage to perform it. Columbus made three
-voyages, as viceroy and admiral, five years before Americus made one
-as a geographer; but Vespucius writing to his friends at Florence that
-he had discovered a new world, they took his word, and the citizens
-decreed that a grand illumination should be made before the door of his
-house every three years, on the feast of All Saints. Such are the accidents
-by which honours are attained. A merchant gives his name to
-one half of the globe from happening to be on board a fleet that in 1489
-sailed along the coast of Brazil!</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_206_206" id="Footnote_206_206"></a><a href="#FNanchor_206_206"><span class="label">[206]</span></a> This story has been told of Brunelleschi, who improved the architecture
-of Florence many years before Columbus was born, and it has
-been since related of many others. These ambulatory anecdotes are
-transferred from one traveller to another, like the wishing-cap of
-Fortunatus, that was made to fit every head on which it was placed.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_207_207" id="Footnote_207_207"></a><a href="#FNanchor_207_207"><span class="label">[207]</span></a> "There is scarce an Egyptian, Greek, or Roman deity, but hath a
-twisted serpent, twisted cornucopia, or some symbol winding in this
-manner, to accompany it."&mdash;<cite>Preface to Analysis of Beauty</cite>, p. 18.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_208_208" id="Footnote_208_208"></a><a href="#FNanchor_208_208"><span class="label">[208]</span></a> Some of these were in wood, and some in copper. The painter,
-when once asked why he did not answer them, replied, that "he had
-not seen one which promised to live so long as it would take to engrave
-a plate." A few of these poignant satires I have seen; but they have
-now attained a black letter value, and are seldom to be found except in
-the cabinets of the curious. A series of six or eight, beginning with one
-entitled "The Butifyer, or a Touch on the Times," Plate I., were designed
-and engraved by an artist of deserved celebrity.<a name="FNanchor_209_209" id="FNanchor_209_209"></a><a href="#Footnote_209_209" class="fnanchor">[209]</a> With a frankness for
-which he is remarkable, and which does him honour, he once acknowledged
-to me, that being a very young man, he was deceived by the
-loud clamours of certain veterans, at that time leaders in the arts; but
-had he seen Hogarth's merit then as he does now, nothing should have
-induced him to attempt the ridicule of such talents.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_209_209" id="Footnote_209_209"></a><a href="#FNanchor_209_209"><span class="label">[209]</span></a> Mr. Paul Sandby.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_210_210" id="Footnote_210_210"></a><a href="#FNanchor_210_210"><span class="label">[210]</span></a> This alludes to the time Hogarth thought would elapse before
-Stuart's plan was completed; and the prediction was amply verified, for
-the second volume of <cite>Athens</cite> was not published until 1789 or 90,
-though the title-page is dated 1787.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_211_211" id="Footnote_211_211"></a><a href="#FNanchor_211_211"><span class="label">[211]</span></a> Stuart being once questioned by Frank Hayman upon his right to
-assume both these titles, said that "Poetry was his wife, and Architecture
-his mistress." "You may call them so," said Hayman, "but I never
-heard that you had living issue by either."</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_212_212" id="Footnote_212_212"></a><a href="#FNanchor_212_212"><span class="label">[212]</span></a> The mortification Hogarth naturally felt at seeing more money
-given for a drawing of an ancient pig-sty than he received for his most
-capital work, was unquestionably the strongest inducement.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_213_213" id="Footnote_213_213"></a><a href="#FNanchor_213_213"><span class="label">[213]</span></a> A description of this print was published in <cite>The Beauties of all the
-Magazines</cite> for 1761; part of it I have subjoined:&mdash;
-</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-<p>
-"Over the first row is written the title Episcopal. The first capital
-discovers only a forked nose, lips, and one eye; the rest of the face is
-eclipsed by the wig's protuberance. The next three etchings are only
-the hinder parts of heads; by these Mr. Hogarth satirizes the present
-age for their immoralities, which are so notorious, that three-fifths of
-the religious orders turn their backs upon us, not being able to behold
-such wickedness.
-</p>
-<p>
-"The last visage in the line is marked with true pedantic contempt;
-the wig's fore-top is like the forked hill of Parnassus, and there is a roll
-round the forehead, like a <span class="fs80">MS.</span> scroll; the eyelids are almost closed,
-which denotes <em>the wise man's wink</em>, or that he can see the world with
-half an eye. The muscles of the countenance are curled up into disdain,
-and he seems to say, 'I despise ye, ye illiterati!'
-</p>
-<p>
-"The immense quantity of grizzle which is wove into the wigs carries
-a twofold design&mdash;for reverence and for warmth. The make of these
-canonicals evinces the care this order take of themselves, for the sake of
-those committed to their trust; and the profusion of curls or friz in each
-denotes the wearer must be most learned, because, as the country folk
-say, Why should they put a double coat of thatch upon a barn, without
-there was a greater proportion than ordinary of grain housed therein?
-</p>
-<p>
-"The next row is inscribed Aldermanic. The first wig has two ends,
-exactly like the dropsical legs of some over-gorged glutton; and the
-three-quartered face indicates Plenty, Porter, and Politics. On the
-brow, domestical significancy is seated; a look necessary to each
-master who dozes in his arm-chair on the Sunday evening, while his
-lady reads prayers to the rest of the family. It is a countenance which
-carries dignity with it even at the upper end of a table at a turtle-eating.
-</p>
-<p>
-"The second has one lock dependent like a sheep's bushy tail. This
-man could make speeches, knew the nature of debentures, and was
-much harassed by cent. per cent. commerce. Many are the sleepless
-nights he has passed in scheming how to fix, if for only half a day, the
-fluctuating chances of 'Change Alley.
-</p>
-<p>
-"The third wig is, as the sailors say, 'all aback.' By the swelling
-of the full bottom, we have an idea of Magna Charta consequence, and
-guess that the wearer would say something&mdash;if he could but see it.
-</p>
-<p>
-"The next is parted triangular-wise, to fall each side the shoulders.
-This design was originally taken from a nutting-stick. Thus one of our
-finest capitals was delineated from a square tile, a weed, and a basket.
-</p>
-<p>
-"With all modest conjecture we presume, from our intense application
-to mathematics, that the semicircular sweep at the end of the last full
-bottom signifies a gold chain. But as we are Englishmen, and will
-have nothing to do with chains, we shall hasten to the wigs and chins
-in the third, entitled 'Lexonical.'
-</p>
-<p>
-"Great men are always celebrated for great things: Cicero for his
-wart; Ovid for a nose almost equal to Slawkenbergius'; and this portrait
-seems to be ushered into notice by the curvature of the chin. How
-venerably elegant do these Lexonicals appear! Here is indeed law at
-full length. Special pleadings in the fore-top; declarations, replications,
-rejoinders, issues, and demurrers in every buckle. The knotty
-points of practice in the intricacies of the twisted tail, and the depth of
-the whole wig, emblematically express the length of a Chancery suit,
-while the black coif behind looks like a blister."</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_214_214" id="Footnote_214_214"></a><a href="#FNanchor_214_214"><span class="label">[214]</span></a> A term peculiarly appropriated to the Court of Common Pleas.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_215_215" id="Footnote_215_215"></a><a href="#FNanchor_215_215"><span class="label">[215]</span></a> To the honour of Sir John Fielding, he once attempted to prevent
-its being performed, but the attempt failed. Since that time it has
-been so completely disfigured by Mr. Charles Bannister being disguised
-in the character of Polly, and Macheath personated by Mrs. Cargill,
-etc. etc. etc., that no person who had the least pretensions to taste
-would be seen at such a drama in masquerade.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_216_216" id="Footnote_216_216"></a><a href="#FNanchor_216_216"><span class="label">[216]</span></a> "<cite>Johnson.</cite> I am of opinion that more influence has been ascribed
-to the <cite>Beggars' Opera</cite> than it in reality ever had; for I do not
-believe that any man was ever made a rogue by being present at its
-representation. At the same time, I do not deny that it may have some
-influence, by making the character of a rogue familiar, and in some
-degree pleasing." Then collecting himself, as it were to give a heavy
-stroke; "There is in it such a labefaction of all principles, as may be
-injurious to morality."&mdash;Boswell's <cite>Johnson</cite>.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_217_217" id="Footnote_217_217"></a><a href="#FNanchor_217_217"><span class="label">[217]</span></a> A very eminent physician, whose discernment is as acute and penetrating
-in judging of the human character as it is in his own profession,
-remarked once at a club where I was, that a lively young man would
-hardly resist a solicitation from his mistress to go upon the highway,
-immediately after being present at the <cite>Beggars' Opera</cite>. I have been told
-of an ingenious observation by Mr. Gibbon, that "the <cite>Beggars' Opera</cite>
-may perhaps have sometimes increased the number of highwaymen,
-but that it has had a beneficial effect in refining that class of men,
-making them less ferocious, more polite, in short, more like gentlemen."
-Upon this Mr. Courtenay said, that Gay was the Orpheus of highwaymen.&mdash;Note
-upon Boswell's <cite>Johnson</cite>, vol. i. p. 488.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_218_218" id="Footnote_218_218"></a><a href="#FNanchor_218_218"><span class="label">[218]</span></a> Glory be to great Apollo! At that auspicious period his lyre should
-have been new strung, and exalted in Britain; for her nobles were as
-much interested in the disputes between a trio of Italian singers, as they
-now are in those on which depends the salvation of the empire.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_219_219" id="Footnote_219_219"></a><a href="#FNanchor_219_219"><span class="label">[219]</span></a> The Ridiculous Travellers returned to Italy.
-</p>
-<p>
-An Italian I was once talking with upon this crotchet contest, concluded
-an harangue, calculated to throw Gay's talents and taste into
-ridicule, with "Saire, this simple signor did tri to pelt mine countrymen
-out of England with <em>Lumps of Pudding</em>," another of the <cite>Beggars' Opera</cite>
-tunes.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_220_220" id="Footnote_220_220"></a><a href="#FNanchor_220_220"><span class="label">[220]</span></a> Doctor Arbuthnot, describing the declining state of operas (in a
-letter printed in the <cite>Daily Journal</cite>), says, "I take the <cite>Beggars' Opera</cite>
-to be the touchstone to try British taste on, and it has accordingly
-proved effectual in discovering our true inclinations, which, how artfully
-soever they may be disguised by a childish fondness for Italian
-poetry and music, in preference to our own, will, in one way or other,
-start up and disclose themselves."</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_221_221" id="Footnote_221_221"></a><a href="#FNanchor_221_221"><span class="label">[221]</span></a> In the <cite>London Chronicle</cite> for April 6, 1762, is the following paragraph:
-"On Friday last, at the sale of the late Mr. Rich's pictures,
-jewels, etc., a clock by Graham was bought by the Right Honourable
-the Earl of Chesterfield for £42; and a scene in the <cite>Beggars' Opera</cite>,
-where Lucy and Polly are pleading for Macheath, painted by Hogarth,
-was sold for £32, 14s. to his Grace the Duke of Leeds. The money
-arising from the whole sale amounted to £683, 14s."</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_222_222" id="Footnote_222_222"></a><a href="#FNanchor_222_222"><span class="label">[222]</span></a> The name of that right cunning workman, Filch, is not introduced
-in the description of the outline; by an edition of the opera, published
-in 1729, I find he was personated by a Mr. Clark.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_223_223" id="Footnote_223_223"></a><a href="#FNanchor_223_223"><span class="label">[223]</span></a> The part of this hero of the highway being originally cast for Quin,
-intimates the style in which it was thought characteristic to play it.
-Walker was praised for performing it with dignity!</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_224_224" id="Footnote_224_224"></a><a href="#FNanchor_224_224"><span class="label">[224]</span></a> In this are several portraits; one of Sir Francis Page of severe
-memory, with a halter round his neck&mdash;
-</p>
-
-<p class="pfs80">"Hard words or hanging, if your judge be Page."</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_225_225" id="Footnote_225_225"></a><a href="#FNanchor_225_225"><span class="label">[225]</span></a> In this, as in almost all his dedications, the poet is very lavish of
-his panegyric. Thus does it begin:&mdash;
-</p>
-<p>
-"<span class="smcap">May it please your Grace</span>,&mdash;The favour which heroic plays
-have lately found upon our theatres, has been wholly derived to them
-from the countenance and approbation they have received at Court.
-The most eminent persons for wit and honour in the royal circle
-having so far owned them, that they have judged no way so fit as
-verse to entertain a noble audience or to express a noble passion. And
-among the rest which have been written in this kind, they have been so
-indulgent to this poem, as to allow it no inconsiderable place. Since,
-therefore, to the Court I owe its fortune on the stage; so, being now
-more publicly exposed in print, I humbly recommend it to your
-Grace's protection, who by all knowing persons is esteemed a principal
-ornament of the Court. But though the rank which you hold in the
-royal family might direct the eyes of a poet to you, yet your beauty
-and goodness detain and fix them," etc. etc. etc.
-</p>
-<p>
-In the fourth act is the line about which Dryden has been so unmercifully
-laughed at, and which I have invariably seen quoted:
-</p>
-
-<p class="pfs80">"I follow fate, which does too fast pursue."</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
-This might be, and has been defended, by supposing that the race was
-run in a circle; but the line in a song, warbled by an Indian woman at
-the side of a fountain, is as follows:&mdash;
-</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container"><div class="poetry">
-<p class="verseq">"Ah, fading joy, how quickly art thou past!</p>
-<p class="verse4">Yet we thy ruin haste:</p>
-<p class="verse">As if the cares of human life were few,</p>
-<p class="verse4">We seek out new,</p>
-<p class="verse">And follow fate, which would too fast pursue," etc.</p>
-</div></div>
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_226_226" id="Footnote_226_226"></a><a href="#FNanchor_226_226"><span class="label">[226]</span></a> The following was given to me by a collector of dramatic curiosities,
-who in the course of a long life has raked together as many
-quires of ancient and modern play-bills as would cover every dead wall
-in the metropolis, and I am assured that of the above-mentioned handbill
-it is
-</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p class="pfs80">A TRUE COPY.</p>
-
-<p>"Connection of the <cite>Indian Emperor</cite> to the <cite>Indian Queen</cite>.
-</p>
-<p>
-"The conclusion of the <cite>Indian Emperor</cite> (part of which poem was
-written by me) left little matter for another story to be built on, there
-remaining but two of the considerable characters alive, viz. Montezuma
-and Orazia: thereupon the author of this thought it necessary to produce
-new persons from the old ones; and considering the late Indian
-Queen, before she loved Montezuma, lived in clandestine marriage
-with her great general Traxalla, from those two he has raised a son and
-two daughters, supposed to be grown up to man and woman's estate,
-and their mother Orazia (for whom there was no further use in the
-story) lately dead. So that you are to imagine about twenty years
-elapsed since the coronation of Montezuma, who in the truth of the
-history was a great and glorious prince, and in whose time happened
-the discovery and invasion of Mexico by the Spaniards (under the
-command of Cortez), who joined with the Traxallan Indians, the
-inveterate enemies of Montezuma, wholly subverted that flourishing
-empire, the conquest of which is the subject of this dramatic poem.
-</p>
-<p>
-"I have neither wholly followed the story, nor varied from it, and,
-as near as I could, have traced the native simplicity and ignorance of
-the Indians in relation to European customs: the shipping, armour,
-horses, swords, and guns of the Spaniards, being as new to them as
-their habits and manners were to the Christians.
-</p>
-<p>
-"The difference of their religion from ours, I have taken from the
-story itself; and that which you find of it in the first and fifth acts,
-touching the sufferings and constancy of Montezuma in his opinions, I
-have only illustrated, not altered from those who have written of it.
-</p>
-
-<p class="right">"<span class="smcap">John Dryden.</span>"</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_227_227" id="Footnote_227_227"></a><a href="#FNanchor_227_227"><span class="label">[227]</span></a> Some eighteen or twenty years ago, a person of quality in the
-neighbourhood of Lichfield, dragged together a shoal of little holiday
-fry, to give an infantine exhibition of a new sentimental comedy.
-</p>
-<p>
-A spacious Gothic gallery made an admirable theatre, and for scenery&mdash;there
-was an excellent substitute, in many a mouldering breadth of
-ancient tapestry, which represented in horrid guise the direful tale of
-Herod's Cruelty. By the hour announced for the theatrical <i lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">début</i> of
-these unfledged actors, the house overflowed. Though the circumstance
-is not recorded by either Boswell or Sir John Hawkins, a late celebrated
-moralist was one of the audience. To the beginning of the fifth act he
-stayed with more patience than could have been expected; at this time
-he exhibited evident marks of <i lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">ennui</i> and lassitude&mdash;yawned three times,
-and attempted to make his exit. The lady of the mansion cut off his
-retreat with, "'Pon honour, Doctor Johnson, you must not go! How
-can you think of leaving the theatre when my Dicky is in so interesting
-a situation?" "Madam," replied the sage, "with the plot of your play
-I was unacquainted, and have waited thus long in the hope that it would
-turn out a tragedy; I might then have seen how naturally little Dicky
-and his dramatic associates would have died! I now perceive that the
-author will neither introduce aconite nor a bare bodkin, and have no
-prospect of a pathetic termination but in Herod or some of his tapestry
-hang-dogs starting into life. Should these murderous ruffians once step
-upon the stage, all your pretty innocents will most assuredly be put to
-the sword!"</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_228_228" id="Footnote_228_228"></a><a href="#FNanchor_228_228"><span class="label">[228]</span></a> In the third volume of this work, which was compiled from
-Hogarth's manuscripts, and published some time after the two which
-precede it, there is a catalogue of all his prints, and the editor has
-endeavoured to add a more perfect list of the numerous variations than
-has been hitherto given to the public.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_229_229" id="Footnote_229_229"></a><a href="#FNanchor_229_229"><span class="label">[229]</span></a> In a marginal leaf of the late Doctor Lort's <cite>Trusler</cite>, I found a piece
-of a newspaper with the following remarks (neither the date nor title of
-the paper were inserted): "Whether the late extraordinary sums paid
-for the works of Hogarth at Mr. Gulston's sale are to be regarded on
-the whole as proofs of our artist's merit, or of extravagance in our
-modern collectors, I shall not venture to determine; and yet the
-following statement of the rapid advance in the value of prints from
-this celebrated master may furnish notices to assist the judgment of
-your readers:&mdash;
-</p>
-<p>
-"In 1780, Mr. Walpole obliged the world with a fourth volume of
-his <cite>Anecdotes of Painting in England</cite>. In this entertaining performance
-was comprised the first catalogue of Hogarth's pieces. I say the first,
-for every preceding enumeration of them was defective in the extreme.
-This was succeeded in 1781 by a publication from the ingenious and
-accurate Mr. Nichols, who considerably enlarged and amended the
-list made by his predecessor.
-</p>
-<p>
-"In the same year, Mr. Bailley's collection, which would now be
-deemed an imperfect one, was sold at Christie's for £61, 10s. In 1782
-it was resold, with some additions, at Barford's for £105.
-</p>
-<p>
-"In 1785, the late Mr. Henderson of Covent Garden Theatre disposed
-of his collection, by far less complete than either of the foregoing,
-for £126.
-</p>
-<p>
-"In 1786, Mr. Gulston's was sold piecemeal by Mr. Greenwood;
-and though the condition of all such articles in it, as real taste and
-common sense would style the most valuable, were very indifferent, the
-whole series is reported to have brought in upwards of £600.<a name="FNanchor_230_230" id="FNanchor_230_230"></a><a href="#Footnote_230_230" class="fnanchor">[230]</a> At this
-auction, the plates now to be particularized were knocked down at the
-following rates, though taken altogether they were scarce worth the
-money paid for the cheapest of them:&mdash;
-</p>
-
-<table border="0" cellpadding="4" cellspacing="0" summary="Plates sold">
-<tr><td class="tdl">Two engravings on plate</td><td class="tdr">£4</td><td class="tdr">14</td><td class="tdr">6</td></tr>
-<tr><td class="tdl">Three ditto</td><td class="tdr">3</td><td class="tdr">10</td><td class="tdr">0</td></tr>
-<tr><td class="tdl">Small arms of the Duchess of Kendal</td><td class="tdr">4</td><td class="tdr">0</td><td class="tdr">0</td></tr>
-<tr><td class="tdl">Large ditto</td><td class="tdr">6</td><td class="tdr">0</td><td class="tdr">0</td></tr>
-<tr><td class="tdl">Arms of Lord Aylmer</td><td class="tdr">7</td><td class="tdr">10</td><td class="tdr">0</td></tr>
-<tr><td class="tdl">Arms unknown, with women as terms</td><td class="tdr">6</td><td class="tdr">10</td><td class="tdr">0</td></tr>
-<tr><td class="tdl">Two ditto</td><td class="tdr">1</td><td class="tdr">11</td><td class="tdr">6</td></tr>
-<tr><td class="tdl">Impression from a tankard</td><td class="tdr">10</td><td class="tdr">0</td><td class="tdr">0</td></tr>
-<tr><td class="tdl">Hogarth's shop-bill and another</td><td class="tdr">11</td><td class="tdr">15</td><td class="tdr">0</td></tr>
-<tr><td class="tdl">Rape of the Lock; impression from a gold snuff-box</td></tr>
-<tr><td class="tdl">&nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; presented to Mr. Pope</td><td class="tdr">33</td><td class="tdr">0</td><td class="tdr">0</td></tr>
-<tr><td class="tdl">Scene of Evening, without the girl</td><td class="tdr">40</td><td class="tdr">8</td><td class="tdr">6</td></tr>
-</table>
-
-<p>
-"Should the celebrity of the delightful mock heroic poem, or the
-rareness of an imperfect play tending to show that a complete design is
-not always to be hit at once even by a Hogarth, furnish some apology
-for the purchase of the two last articles, what excuse can be invented
-for the collectors who bought the preceding trash on terms so ridiculously
-high? Of all the trifling works of art, coats of arms must be reckoned
-the most contemptible. These early productions of our author on silver
-tea-tables, mugs, and waiters, have no sort of merit to recommend them,
-nor were ever meant to be impressed on paper (except as in momentary
-satisfaction to the engraver); for being there reversed, like the prayers
-of witches, they must be read backwards. Besides, what taste or genius
-can be manifested in the disposition of a cat's whiskers or a fox's tail;
-in the emblazonry of a black swan with two necks, or a blue boar with
-gilded tail? What abilities are requisite for the expansion of an old
-woman's furred cloak (very pompously denominated a mantle) at the
-back of a shield, or for inscribing some bright sentence or wretched
-pun (yclep'd a motto) in Gothic Latin on a ribbon fantastically waved?
-For the design in which nature and manners are displayed, no praise
-can be too exalted; but as for his heraldry,&mdash;his representation of birds
-and beasts that never had existence,&mdash;
-</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container"><div class="poetry">
-<p class="verseq">"A dragon, and a finless fish,</p>
-<p class="verse">A clip-wing'd griffin, and a molten raven,</p>
-<p class="verse">And such a deal of skimble-skamble stuff,"&mdash;</p>
-</div></div>
-
-<p>
-these can never be allowed to contribute a single leaf to the chaplet he
-has so long and so deservedly worn.
-</p>
-<p>
-"I have dwelt the more on these things, because I am assured there
-are print-dealers now rummaging the books of our oldest engravers, in
-the hope that a still greater number of useless and insignificant particulars
-consisting of arms, etc., imputable to Hogarth, will be found;
-nor are their hopes less sanguine that the madness of collectors will be
-confirmed instead of cured by the examples hung out at the late auction
-in Leicester Fields.
-</p>
-<p>
-"Let me hope, however, that for the future every sensible collector
-will think his assemblage of Hogarth's prints sufficiently complete, without
-the foolish adjuncts already described and reprobated. For the
-authenticity of these trifles being obvious to no kind of proof, they
-principally tend to expose their purchasers to the frauds of designing
-people, who will laugh at their credulity while they pocket their cash."</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_230_230" id="Footnote_230_230"></a><a href="#FNanchor_230_230"><span class="label">[230]</span></a> A short time before this, the writer of these volumes had the honour
-of furnishing his Royal Highness the Prince of Wales with a set of
-Hogarth's works. They consisted of remarkably fine impressions from
-his most valuable plates, many of the variations, and some which were
-deemed scarce (though not one of either the large or small coat of
-arms). For the two volumes he charged and received £84.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_231_231" id="Footnote_231_231"></a><a href="#FNanchor_231_231"><span class="label">[231]</span></a> See the manner of disgracing the most serious subjects in many
-celebrated old pictures, by introducing low, absurd, and obscure, and
-often profane, circumstances into them.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_232_232" id="Footnote_232_232"></a><a href="#FNanchor_232_232"><span class="label">[232]</span></a>
-</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container"><div class="poetry">
-<p class="verseq">"What shall withstand old Time's devouring hand?</p>
-<p class="verse">Where's Troy? and where's the Maypole in the Strand?"</p>
-</div></div>
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_233_233" id="Footnote_233_233"></a><a href="#FNanchor_233_233"><span class="label">[233]</span></a> I may be told that this is a mistake, and that it was either to Pope
-or Swift. It was the fate of Arbuthnot to twine laurel for the brows
-of his friends. I know it was a partnership account, but surely the
-Doctor was first in the firm.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_234_234" id="Footnote_234_234"></a><a href="#FNanchor_234_234"><span class="label">[234]</span></a> See the introduction to the <cite>Memoirs of Scriblerus</cite>.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_235_235" id="Footnote_235_235"></a><a href="#FNanchor_235_235"><span class="label">[235]</span></a> Should any Lord, Knight, Esquire, or spirited Bookseller, choose
-to purchase the whole copy, I am ready to treat with him upon proper
-terms.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_236_236" id="Footnote_236_236"></a><a href="#FNanchor_236_236"><span class="label">[236]</span></a> The writer of a modern book of travels, relating the particulars of
-his being cast away, thus concludeth: "After having walked eleven
-hours without tracing the print of a human foot, to my great comfort
-and delight I saw a man hanging upon a gibbet: my pleasure at this
-cheering prospect was inexpressible, for it convinced me that I was in a
-civilised country!"</p></div>
-
-</div>
-
-
-<p class="p4" />
-<hr class="full pg-brk" />
-<hr class="full" />
-<hr class="full" />
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_1C" id="Page_1C">[1C]</a></span></p>
-
-<p class="p1 right fs80"><em>SEASON 1874.</em></p>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<img src="images/cat_001.jpg" width="200" alt="" />
-</div>
-
-<p class="pfs150 wsp">A LIST OF BOOKS</p>
-
-<p class="pfs70">PUBLISHED BY</p>
-
-<p class="pfs180 lsp wsp"><span class="smcap">Chatto &amp; Windus</span></p>
-
-<p class="pfs100">(<em>Successors to John Camden Hotten</em>),</p>
-
-<p class="pfs90 wsp">74 &amp; 75, PICCADILLY, LONDON, W.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<img src="images/cat-sep.jpg" width="150" alt="" />
-</div>
-
-<p class="pfs80">THE FAMOUS FRASER PORTRAITS.</p>
-
-<p class="pfs120 lsp wsp">MACLISE'S GALLERY OF</p>
-
-<p class="pfs120">ILLUSTRIOUS LITERARY CHARACTERS.</p>
-
-<p class="pfs80">With Notes by the late WILLIAM MAGINN, LL.D.</p>
-
-
- <div class="advert">
-
-<p>Edited, with copious Notes, by <span class="smcap">William Bates</span>, B.A., Professor of
-Classics in Queen's College, Birmingham. The volume contains the
-whole 83 <span class="smcap">Splendid and most Characteristic Portraits</span>, now
-first issued in a complete form. In demy 4to, over 400 pages,
-cloth gilt and gilt edges, 31<em>s.</em> 6<em>d.</em>; or, in morocco elegant, 70<em>s.</em></p>
-
-<div class="blockquotx">
-
-"What a truly charming book of pictures and prose, the quintessence, as it were,
-of Maclise and Maginn, giving the very form and pressure of their literary time,
-would this century of illustrious characters make."&mdash;<cite>Notes and Queries.</cite></div>
-
-
-<hr class="fulla" />
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_2C" id="Page_2C">[2C]</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="figleft">
-<img src="images/cat_002.jpg" width="170" alt="" />
-</div>
-
-<p class="pfs90"><br />THE PRINCE OF CARICATURISTS.</p>
-
-<p class="pfs100">&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;</p>
-
-<p class="pfs120 bold">THE WORKS OF<br />
-<span class="pfs135 lht">JAMES GILLRAY,</span></p>
-
-<p class="pfs120"><em>The Caricaturist</em>,</p>
-
-<p class="pfs100"><span class="lht">With the Story of his Life and Times,
-and full and Anecdotal Descriptions
-of his Engravings.</span></p>
-
-<p class="pfs100 lht">Edited by THOS. WRIGHT, Esq.,
-M.A., F.S.A.</p>
-
-<p><span class="lht">Illustrated with 90 full-page Plates,
-and about 400 Wood Engravings.
-Demy 4to, 600 pages, cloth extra,
-31<em>s.</em> 6<em>d.</em>; or, in morocco elegant,
-70<em>s.</em></span></p>
-
-
-<hr class="fulla" />
-<p class="pfs180 lsp2 wsp bold">BEAUTIFUL PICTURES</p>
-<p class="pfs135 wsp bold">BY BRITISH ARTISTS.</p>
-
-<p>A Gathering of Favourites from our Picture Galleries, 1800-1870. By
-<span class="smcap">Wilkie</span>, <span class="smcap">Constable</span>, <span class="smcap">J. M. W. Turner</span>, <span class="smcap">Mulready</span>, Sir <span class="smcap">Edwin
-Landseer</span>, <span class="smcap">Maclise</span>, <span class="smcap">Leslie</span>, <span class="smcap">E. M. Ward</span>, <span class="smcap">Frith</span>, Sir <span class="smcap">John
-Gilbert</span>, <span class="smcap">Ansdell</span>, <span class="smcap">Marcus Stone</span>, Sir <span class="smcap">Noel Paton</span>, <span class="smcap">Eyre
-Crowe</span>, <span class="smcap">Faed</span>, <span class="smcap">Madox Brown</span>. All Engraved in the highest style
-of Art. With Notices of the Artists by <span class="smcap">Sydney Armytage</span>, M.A.
-A New Edition. Imperial 4to, cloth gilt and gilt edges, 21<em>s.</em>; or,
-in morocco elegant, 65<em>s.</em></p>
-
-
-<hr class="fulla" />
-<p class="pfs100 smcap">Uniform with "Beautiful Pictures."</p>
-
-<p class="pfs180 lsp wsp bold">COURT BEAUTIES OF THE</p>
-<p class="pfs135 wsp bold">REIGN OF CHARLES II.</p>
-
-<p>From the Originals in the Royal Gallery at Windsor, by Sir
-<span class="smcap">Peter Lely</span>. Engraved in the highest style of Art by <span class="smcap">Thomson</span>,
-<span class="smcap">Wright</span>, <span class="smcap">Scriven</span>, <span class="smcap">B. Holl</span>, <span class="smcap">Wagstaff</span>, and <span class="smcap">T. A. Deane</span>.
-With Memoirs by Mrs. <span class="smcap">Jameson</span>, Author of "Legends of the
-Madonna." New and sumptuous "Presentation Edition." Imp.
-4to, cloth gilt and gilt edges, 21<em>s.</em>; or, in morocco elegant, 65<em>s.</em></p>
-
-<div class="blockquotx">
-
-"This truly beautiful and splendid production is equally a gem among the Fine
-Arts and in Literature."&mdash;<cite>Quarterly Review.</cite></div>
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_3C" id="Page_3C">[3C]</a></span></p>
-<hr class="fulla" />
-<p class="pfs100 smcap">Companion to the "History of Signboards."</p>
-
-<p><b><span class="fs160">Advertising: its History</span></b>, in all Ages and
-Countries, with many very Amusing Anecdotes and Examples of
-Successful Advertisers. Crown 8vo, with numerous Illustrations,
-coloured and plain, cloth extra, 7<em>s.</em> 6<em>d.</em></p>
-
-<p class="rightx">[<em>In preparation.</em></p>
-
-
-<hr class="fulla" />
-<p class="pfs100 smcap">Are You Engaged? If so, get</p>
-
-<div class="figleft">
-<img src="images/cat_003a.jpg" width="300" alt="" />
-</div>
-
-<p class="negin1"><b><span class="fs160">Advice to Parties</span>
-About to Marry.</b> A Series
-of Instructions in Jest and
-Earnest. By the Hon. <span class="smcap">Hugh
-Rowley</span>. With Humorous Illustrations.
-Price 3<em>s.</em> 6<em>d.</em>, elegantly
-bound, and enclosed in
-tinted wrapper, beautifully
-scented by <span class="smcap">Rimmel</span>.</p>
-
-<div class="blockquotx">
-
-⁂ <em>Before taking the "awful plunge"
-be sure to consult this little work. If it
-is not a guarantee against life-long
-misery, it will at least be found of
-great assistance in selecting a partner
-for life.</em></div>
-
-
-<hr class="fulla" />
-<p class="negin1"><b><span class="fs160">American Happy Thoughts.</span></b> The
-finest collection of American Humour ever made. Foolscap 8vo,
-illustrated covers, 1<em>s.</em></p>
-
-<p class="rightx">[<em>Preparing.</em></p>
-
-
-<hr class="fulla" />
-<div class="figleft">
-<img src="images/cat_003b.jpg" width="170" alt="" />
-</div>
-
-<p class="negin1"><b><span class="fs160">Anacreon.</span></b> Illustrated by
-the Exquisite Designs of <span class="smcap">Girodet</span>. Translated
-by <span class="smcap">Thomas Moore</span>. Bound in vellum
-cloth and Etruscan gold, 12<em>s.</em> 6<em>d.</em></p>
-
-<div class="blockquotx">
-
-⁂ <em>A beautiful and captivating volume. The
-well-known Paris house, Firmin Didot, a few years
-since produced a miniature edition of these exquisite
-designs by photography, and sold a large number at
-£2 per copy. The Designs have been universally
-admired by both artists and poets.</em></div>
-
-
-<hr class="fulla" />
-<p class="negin1"><b>Armorial Register of the Order of
-the Garter</b>, from Edward III. to the Present Time. The several
-Shields beautifully emblazoned in Gold and Colours from the Original
-Stall Plates in St. George's Chapel, Windsor. All emblazoned by
-hand. A sumptuous volume, bound in crimson morocco, gilt, £20.</p>
-
-
-<hr class="fulla" />
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_4C" id="Page_4C">[4C]</a></span></p>
-
-<p class="pfs120 lsp">ARTEMUS WARD'S WORKS.</p>
-
-<div class="figleft">
-<img src="images/cat_004.jpg" width="250" alt="" />
-</div>
-
-<p class="negin1"><b><span class="fs160">Artemus Ward,</span>
-Complete.</b> The Works of <span class="smcap">Charles
-Farrer Browne</span>, better known as
-"<span class="smcap">Artemus Ward</span>," now first collected.
-Crown 8vo, with fine Portrait,
-facsimile of handwriting, &amp;c.,
-540 pages, cloth neat, 7<em>s.</em> 6<em>d.</em></p>
-
-<div class="blockquotx">
-
-⁂ <em>Comprises all that the humourist has
-written in England or America. Admirers
-of Artemus Ward will be glad to possess
-his writings in a complete form.</em></div>
-
-<p class="pfs70">&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;</p>
-
-<p class="negin1"><b><span class="fs160">Artemus Ward's</span>
-Lecture at the Egyptian Hall</b>,
-with the Panorama. Edited by the
-late <span class="smcap">T. W. Robertson</span>, Author of "Caste," &amp;c., and <span class="smcap">E. P. Hingston</span>.
-Small 4to, exquisitely printed, bound in green and gold, with
-<span class="smcap">numerous Tinted Illustrations</span>, 6<em>s.</em></p>
-
-
-<hr class="r30a" />
-<p><b><span class="fs160">Artemus Ward: his Book.</span></b> With Notes
-and Introduction by the Editor of the "Biglow Papers." One of
-the wittiest books published for many years. Fcap. 8vo, illustrated
-cover, 1<em>s.</em></p>
-
-<div class="blockquotx">
-
-The <cite>Saturday Review</cite> says:&mdash;"The author combines the powers of Thackeray
-with those of Albert Smith. The salt is rubbed in by a native hand&mdash;one which has
-the gift of tickling."</div>
-
-<hr class="r30a" />
-<p><b><span class="fs160">Artemus Ward: his Travels among</span>
-the Mormons and on the Rampage.</b> Edited by <span class="smcap">E. P. Hingston</span>,
-the Agent and Companion of <span class="smcap">A. Ward</span> whilst "on the
-Rampage." New Edition, price 1<em>s.</em></p>
-
-<div class="blockquotx">
-
-⁂ <em>Some of Artemus's most mirth-provoking papers are to be found in this
-book. The chapters on the Mormons will unbend the sternest countenance. As
-bits of fun they are</em> <span class="fs70">IMMENSE</span>!</div>
-
-<hr class="r30a" />
-<p><b><span class="fs160">Artemus Ward's Letters to "Punch,"</span></b>
-Among the Witches, and other Sketches. Cheap Popular Edition.
-Fcap. 8vo, in illustrated cover, 1<em>s.</em>; or, 16mo, bound in cloth extra, 2<em>s.</em></p>
-
-<div class="blockquotx">
-
-⁂ <em>The volume contains, in addition, some quaint and humorous compositions
-which were found upon the author's table after his decease.</em></div>
-
-<hr class="r30a" />
-<p><b><span class="fs160">Artemus Ward among the Fenians:</span></b>
-with the Showman's Experiences of Life at Washington, and Military
-Ardour at Baldinsville. Toned paper, price 6<em>d.</em></p>
-
-
-<hr class="fulla" />
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_5C" id="Page_5C">[5C]</a></span></p>
-
-<p><b><span class="fs160">Army Lists of the Roundheads and</span>
-Cavaliers in the Civil War, 1642.</b> Second Edition, considerably
-Enlarged and Corrected. Edited, with Notes, by <span class="smcap">Edward Peacock</span>,
-F.S.A. 4to, half-Roxburghe, 7<em>s.</em> 6<em>d.</em></p>
-
-<div class="blockquotx pad4">
-
-⁂ <em>Very interesting to Antiquaries and Genealogists.</em></div>
-
-
-<hr class="fulla" />
-<div class="figleft">
-<img src="images/cat_005a.jpg" width="300" alt="" />
-</div>
-
-<p class="negin1"><b><span class="fs160">The Art of Amusing.</span></b>
-A Collection of Graceful Arts,
-Games, Tricks, Puzzles, and
-Charades, intended to amuse
-everybody, and enable all to
-amuse everybody else. By
-<span class="smcap">Frank Bellew</span>. With nearly
-300 Illustrations. Crown 8vo,
-4<em>s.</em> 6<em>d.</em></p>
-
-<div class="blockquotx">
-
-<p>⁂ <em>One of the most entertaining handbooks
-of amusements ever published.</em></p></div>
-
-<p class="pfs70">&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;</p>
-
-<p class="negin1"><b><span class="fs160">Awful Crammers.</span></b>
-A New American Joke Book.
-Edited by <span class="smcap">Titus A. Brick</span>,
-Author of "Shaving Them."
-Fcap. 8vo, with numerous
-curious Illustrations, 1<em>s.</em></p>
-
-<div class="blockquotx">
-
-A <span class="smcap">Fine Edition</span> is also published, in crown 8vo, printed on toned
-paper, and bound in cloth gilt, at 3<em>s.</em> 6<em>d.</em></div>
-
-<div class="blockquotx">
-
-"Rarer than the phœnix is the virtuous man who will consent to lose a good
-anecdote because it isn't true."&mdash;<span class="smcap">De Quincy.</span></div>
-
-
-<hr class="fulla" />
-<div class="figleft">
-<img src="images/cat_005b.jpg" width="250" alt="" />
-</div>
-
-<p class="negin1"><b><span class="fs160">Babies and Ladders</span></b>:
-<span class="lht">Essays on Things in General. By
-<span class="smcap">Emmanuel Kink</span>. A New Work
-of Irresistible Humour (not American),
-which has excited considerable
-attention. Fcap. 8vo, with
-numerous Vignettes by <span class="smcap">W. S.
-Gilbert</span> and others, 1<em>s.</em></span></p>
-
-
-<hr class="fulla" />
-<p class="negin1"><b><span class="fs160">Bayard Taylor's Diversions</span> of the
-Echo Club.</b> A Delightful Volume of Refined Literary Humour.
-In 16mo, paper cover, with Portrait of the Author, 1<em>s.</em> 6<em>d.</em>; cloth
-extra, 2<em>s.</em></p>
-
-
-<hr class="fulla" />
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_6C" id="Page_6C">[6C]</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<img src="images/cat_006a.jpg" width="500" alt="" />
-</div>
-
-<p class="pfs100 smcap">Uniform with Mr. Ruskin's Edition of "Grimm."</p>
-
-<p class="negin1"><b><span class="fs160">Bechstein's As Pretty as Seven</span></b>, and
-other Popular German Stories. Collected by <span class="smcap">Ludwig Bechstein</span>.
-With Additional Tales by the Brothers <span class="smcap">Grimm</span>. 100 Illustrations by
-<span class="smcap">Richter</span>. Small 4to, green and gold, 6<em>s.</em> 6<em>d.</em>; gilt edges, 7<em>s.</em> 6<em>d.</em></p>
-
-<div class="blockquotx">
-
-⁂ <em>One of the most delightful books for children ever published. It is, in every
-way, a Companion to the German Stories of the Brothers Grimm, and the tales
-are equally pure and healthful. The quaint simplicity of Richter's engravings
-will charm every lover of legendary lore.</em></div>
-
-
-<hr class="fulla" />
-<p class="negin1"><b><span class="fs160">The Biglow Papers.</span></b> By <span class="smcap">James Russell
-Lowell</span>. The Best Edition, with full Glossary, of these extraordinary
-Verses. Fcap. 8vo, illustrated cover, 1<em>s.</em></p>
-
-
-<hr class="fulla" />
-<div class="figleft">
-<img src="images/cat_006b.jpg" width="250" alt="" />
-</div>
-
-<p class="pfs100 smcap">Uniform with our "Rabelais."</p>
-
-<p class="negin1"><b><span class="fs160">Boccaccio's Decameron.</span></b>
-Now fully translated into English,
-with Introduction by <span class="smcap">Thomas Wright</span>,
-F.S.A. Crown 8vo, with the <span class="smcap">Beautiful
-Engravings</span> by <span class="smcap">Stothard</span> which
-adorned Pickering's fine Edition, published
-at £2 12<em>s.</em> 6<em>d.</em> This New
-Edition is only 7<em>s.</em> 6<em>d.</em></p>
-
-<div class="blockquotx">
-
-⁂ <em>A faithful translation, in which are
-restored many passages omitted in former
-Editions.</em></div>
-
-
-<hr class="fulla" />
-<p><b><span class="fs160">Book of Hall-Marks</span></b>; or, Manual of
-Reference for the Goldsmith and Silversmith. By <span class="smcap">Alfred Lutschaunig</span>,
-Manager of the Liverpool Assay Office. Crown 8vo, with
-46 Plates of the Hall-Marks of the different Assay Towns of the
-United Kingdom, as now stamped on Plate and Jewellery, 7<em>s.</em> 6<em>d.</em></p>
-
-<div class="blockquotx">
-
-⁂ <em>This work gives practical methods for testing the quality of gold and silver.
-It was compiled by the author for his own use, and as a Supplement to "Chaffers."</em></div>
-
-
-<hr class="fulla" />
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_7C" id="Page_7C">[7C]</a></span></p>
-
-<p><b><span class="fs160">Booksellers, A History of.</span></b> A Work
-giving full Accounts of the Great Publishing Houses and their
-Founders, both in London and the Provinces, the History of
-their Rise and Progress, and descriptions of the special class of
-Literature dealt in by each. Crown 8vo, over 500 pages, with frontispiece
-and numerous Portraits and Illustrations, cloth extra, 7<em>s.</em> 6<em>d.</em></p>
-
-<div class="blockquotx">
-
-"In these days, ten ordinary Histories of Kings and Courtiers were well exchanged
-against the tenth part of one good History of Booksellers."&mdash;<span class="smcap">Thomas Carlyle.</span></div>
-
-
-<hr class="fulla" />
-<p><b><span class="fs160">Booth's Epigrams</span></b>: Ancient and Modern,
-Humorous, Witty, Satirical, Moral, and Panegyrical. Edited by
-the Rev. <span class="smcap">John Booth</span>, B.A. A New Edition. Pott 8vo, cloth gilt, 6<em>s.</em></p>
-
- </div>
-
-
-<hr class="fulla" />
-<div class="figcenter">
-<img src="images/cat_007.jpg" width="500" alt="" />
-</div>
-
-<p class="pfs70">"Is our civilization a failure, or is the Caucasian played out?"</p>
-
-<p class="pfs100 lsp">BRET HARTE'S WORKS.</p>
-
-<p class="pfs80"><em>Widely known for their Exquisite Pathos and Delightful Humour.</em></p>
-
-<hr class="r30a" />
-
- <div class="advert">
-
-<p><b><span class="fs160">Bret Harte's Complete Works</span></b>, in Prose
-and Poetry. Now First Collected. With Introductory Essay by
-<span class="smcap">J. M. Bellew</span>, Portrait of the Author, and 50 Illustrations. Crown
-8vo, 650 pages, cloth extra, 7<em>s.</em> 6<em>d.</em></p>
-
-
-<hr class="r30a" />
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_8C" id="Page_8C">[8C]</a></span></p>
-
-<p><b><span class="fs160">Bret Harte's Luck of Roaring Camp</span></b>,
-and other Stories. Fcap. 8vo, illustrated cover, 1<em>s.</em></p>
-
-
-<hr class="r30a" />
-<p><b><span class="fs160">Bret Harte's That Heathen Chinee</span></b>,
-and other Humorous Poems. Fcap. 8vo, illustrated cover, 1<em>s.</em> 6<em>d.</em></p>
-
-
-<hr class="r30a" />
-<p><b><span class="fs160">Bret Harte's Sensation Novels Condensed.</span></b>
-Fcap. 8vo, illustrated cover, 1<em>s.</em> 6<em>d.</em></p>
-
-<div class="blockquotx">
-
-⁂ <em>A most enjoyable book, only surpassed, in its special class, by Thackeray's
-Burlesque Novels.</em></div>
-
-
-<hr class="r30a" />
-<p><b><span class="fs160">Bret Harte's Lothaw</span></b>; or, The Adventures
-of a Young Gentleman in Search of a Religion. By Mr. <span class="smcap">Benjamins</span>
-(<em>Bret Harte</em>). Price 6<em>d.</em> Curiously Illustrated.</p>
-
-
-<hr class="r30a" />
-<p><b><span class="fs160">Bret Harte's East and West.</span></b> Fcap.
-8vo, illustrated cover, 1<em>s.</em></p>
-
-
-<hr class="r30a" />
-<p><b><span class="fs160">Bret Harte's Stories of the Sierras</span></b>, and
-other Sketches. With a Wild Story of Western Life by <span class="smcap">Joaquin
-Miller</span>, Author of "Songs of the Sierras." Illustrated cover, 1<em>s.</em></p>
-
-
-<hr class="fulla" />
-<p class="pfs80">NEW EDITIONS OF SIR DAVID BREWSTER'S WORKS.</p>
-
-<p><b><span class="fs160">Brewster's More Worlds than One</span></b>,
-the Creed of the Philosopher and the Hope of the Christian.
-Eleventh Edition. Crown 8vo, cloth, very neat, 4<em>s.</em> 6<em>d.</em></p>
-
-
-<hr class="r30a" />
-<p><b><span class="fs160">Brewster's Martyrs of Science</span></b>:
-Galileo, Tycho Brahe, Kepler. Crown 8vo, cloth, very neat, 4<em>s.</em> 6<em>d.</em></p>
-
-
-<hr class="r30a" />
-<p><b><span class="fs160">Brewster's The Kaleidoscope Practically</span>
-Described.</b> Crown 8vo, with numerous Illustrations,
-cloth, very neat, 4<em>s.</em> 6<em>d.</em></p>
-
-
-<hr class="r30a" />
-<p><b><span class="fs160">Brewster's The Stereoscope Practically</span>
-Described.</b> Crown 8vo, numerous Illustrations, cloth
-neat, 4<em>s.</em> 6<em>d.</em></p>
-
-<div class="blockquotx">
-
-⁂ <em>This was the great philosopher's last contribution to practical science.</em></div>
-
-
-<hr class="fulla" />
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_9C" id="Page_9C">[9C]</a></span></p>
-
-<p><b><span class="fs160">Bright's (Rt. Hon. J., M.P.) Speeches</span></b>
-on Public Affairs of the last Twenty Years. Collated with the
-best Public Reports. Royal 16mo, 370 pages, cloth extra, 1<em>s.</em></p>
-
-<div class="blockquotx">
-
-⁂ <em>A book of special interest at the present time, and wonderfully cheap.</em></div>
-
-
-<hr class="fulla" />
-<p class="pfs80">COLMAN'S HUMOROUS WORKS.</p>
-
-<p><b><span class="fs160">Broad Grins.</span></b> My Nightgown and Slippers,
-and other Humorous Works, Prose and Poetical, of <span class="smcap">George Colman</span>
-the Younger. Now first collected, with Life and Anecdotes of
-the Author, by <span class="smcap">George B. Buckstone</span>. Crown 8vo, 500 pp., 7<em>s.</em> 6<em>d.</em></p>
-
-<div class="blockquotx">
-
-⁂ <em>Admirers of genuine English wit and humour will be delighted with this
-edition of George Colman's humorous works. As a wit, he has had no equal in
-our time; and a man with a tithe of his ability could, at the present day, make
-the fortune of any one of our so-called "comic journals," and bankrupt the rest.</em></div>
-
-
-<hr class="fulla" />
-<p class="pfs100">NEW BOOK FOR BOYS.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<img src="images/cat_009.jpg" width="500" alt="" />
-</div>
-
-<p><b><span class="fs160">The Conquest of the Sea</span></b>: A History
-of Divers and Diving, from the Earliest Times to the Present Day.
-By <span class="smcap">Henry Siebe</span>. Profusely Illustrated with fine Wood Engravings.
-Small crown 8vo, cloth extra, 4<em>s.</em> 6<em>d.</em></p>
-
-
-<hr class="fulla" />
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_10C" id="Page_10C">[10C]</a></span></p>
-
-<p class="pfs100 smcap">Uniform with the 2<em>s.</em> Edition of his Works.</p>
-
-<p><b><span class="fs160">Carlyle (T.) on the Choice of Books.</span></b>
-With a New Life and Anecdotes of the Author. Brown cloth,
-1<em>s.</em> 6<em>d.</em>; paper cover, 1<em>s.</em></p>
-
-
-<hr class="fulla" />
-<p><b><span class="fs160">Chips from a Rough Log.</span></b> Fcap. 8vo,
-illustrated cover, 1<em>s.</em></p>
-
-
-<hr class="fulla" />
-<p><b><span class="fs160">Christmas Songs and Ballads.</span></b> Selected
-and Edited by <span class="smcap">Joshua Sylvester</span>. A New Edition, beautifully
-printed and bound in cloth, extra gilt, gilt edges, 3<em>s.</em> 6<em>d.</em></p>
-
-
-<hr class="fulla" />
-<p><b><span class="fs160">Clerical Anecdotes and Pulpit Eccentricities.</span></b>
-An entirely New Gathering. Square 16mo, in illustrated
-paper wrapper, 1<em>s.</em> 4<em>d.</em>; or cloth neat, 1<em>s.</em> 10<em>d.</em></p>
-
-
-<hr class="fulla" />
-<p><b><span class="fs160">The Country of the Dwarfs.</span></b> By <span class="smcap">Paul
-du Chaillu</span>. A Book of Startling Interest. Fcap. 8vo, illustrated
-with full-page Engravings, in fancy wrapper, 1<em>s.</em></p>
-
-
-<hr class="fulla" />
-<p class="negin1"><b><span class="fs160">Cruikshank's Comic Almanack.</span></b>
-<span class="smcap">First Series</span>, 1835-43. A Gathering of the <span class="smcap">Best Humour</span>, the
-<span class="smcap">Wittiest Sayings</span>, the Drollest Quips, and the Best Things of
-<span class="smcap">Thackeray</span>, <span class="smcap">Hood</span>, <span class="smcap">Mayhew</span>, <span class="smcap">Albert Smith</span>, <span class="smcap">A'Beckett</span>,
-<span class="smcap">Robert Brough</span>, &amp;c. With about One Thousand Woodcuts and Steel
-Engravings by the inimitable <span class="smcap">Cruikshank</span>, <span class="smcap">Hine</span>, <span class="smcap">Landells</span>, &amp;c.
-Crown 8vo, cloth gilt, a very thick volume, price 7<em>s.</em> 6<em>d.</em></p>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<img src="images/cat_010.jpg" width="500" alt="" />
-</div>
-
-
-<hr class="fulla" />
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_11C" id="Page_11C">[11C]</a></span></p>
-
-<p class="negin1"><b><span class="fs160">Cruikshank's Comic Almanack.</span></b>
-<span class="smcap">Second Series</span>, 1844-53, Completing the work. Uniform with the
-<span class="smcap">First Series</span>, and written and illustrated by the same humorists.
-Crown 8vo, cloth gilt, a very thick volume, price 7<em>s.</em> 6<em>d.</em></p>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<img src="images/cat_011a.jpg" width="400" alt="" />
-</div>
-
-<div class="blockquotx">
-
-⁂ <em>The two volumes (each sold separately) form a most extraordinary gathering
-of the best wit and humour of the past half-century. The work forms a "Comic
-History of England" for twenty years.</em></div>
-
-
-<hr class="fulla" />
-<div class="figleft">
-<img src="images/cat_011b.jpg" width="170" alt="" />
-</div>
-
-<p class="pfs80">THE BEST GUIDE TO HERALDRY.</p>
-
-<p><b><span class="fs160">Cussans' Handbook of</span>
-Heraldry</b>; with Instructions for Tracing
-Pedigrees and Deciphering Ancient MSS.;
-also, Rules for the Appointment of Liveries,
-&amp;c., &amp;c. By <span class="smcap">John E. Cussans</span>. Illustrated
-with 360 Plates and Woodcuts. Cr.
-8vo, cloth extra, gilt and emblazoned, 7<em>s.</em> 6<em>d.</em></p>
-
-<div class="blockquotx">
-
-⁂ <em>This volume, beautifully printed on toned paper,
-contains not only the ordinary matter to be found
-in the best books on the science of Armory, but several
-other subjects hitherto unnoticed. Amongst
-these may be mentioned</em>:&mdash;1. <span class="smcap">Directions for
-Tracing Pedigrees.</span> 2. <span class="smcap">Deciphering Ancient
-MSS., illustrated by Alphabets and Facsimiles.</span>
-3. <span class="smcap">The Appointment of Liveries.</span>
-4. <span class="smcap">Continental and American Heraldry, &amp;c.</span></div>
-
-
-<hr class="fulla" />
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_12C" id="Page_12C">[12C]</a></span></p>
-
-<p class="pfs80">VERY IMPORTANT COUNTY HISTORY.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<img src="images/cat_012a.jpg" width="500" alt="" />
-</div>
-
-<p><b><span class="fs160">Cussans' History of Hertfordshire.</span></b>
-A County History, got up in a very superior manner, and ranging
-with the finest works of its class. Illustrated with full-page Plates
-on Copper and Stone, and a profusion of small Woodcuts. Parts
-I. to VI. are now ready, price 21<em>s.</em> each.</p>
-
-<div class="blockquotx">
-
-⁂ <em>An entirely new History of this important County, great attention being
-given to all matters pertaining to the Family History of the locality.</em></div>
-
-
-<hr class="fulla" />
-<p class="pfs100 smcap">Uniform With the "Charles Dickens Edition."</p>
-
-<div class="figleft">
-<img src="images/cat_012b.jpg" width="200" alt="" />
-</div>
-
-<p><b><span class="fs160">Dickens: The Story</span>
-of his Life.</b> By <span class="smcap">Theodore Taylor</span>,
-Author of the "Life of
-Thackeray." Uniform with the
-"Charles Dickens Edition" of his
-Works, and forming a Supplementary
-Volume to that Issue. Cr.
-8vo, crimson cloth, 3<em>s.</em> 6<em>d.</em></p>
-
-<div class="blockquotx">
-
-"Anecdotes seem to have poured in upon
-the author from all quarters.... Turn where
-we will through these 370 pleasant pages,
-something worth reading is sure to meet the
-eye."&mdash;<cite>The Standard.</cite></div>
-
-<p class="pfs90">Also Published:</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">The "Best Edition"</span> of the above Work, illustrated by Photographic
-Frontispiece of "Dickens as Captain Bobadil," Portraits,
-Facsimiles, &amp;c. Crown 8vo, cloth extra, 7<em>s.</em> 6<em>d.</em></p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">The "Cheap Edition,"</span> in 16mo, paper wrapper, with Frontispiece
-and Vignette, 2<em>s.</em></p>
-
-
-<hr class="fulla" />
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_13C" id="Page_13C">[13C]</a></span></p>
-
-<p class="pfs100 smcap">Uniform with the "Charles Dickens Edition."</p>
-
-<p><b><span class="fs160">Dickens' Speeches</span></b>, Social and Literary,
-now first collected. Uniform with, and forming a Supplementary
-Volume to, the "<span class="smcap">Charles Dickens Edition</span>." Crown 8vo,
-crimson cloth, 3<em>s.</em> 6<em>d.</em></p>
-
-<div class="blockquotx">
-
-"His speeches are as good as any of his printed writings."&mdash;<cite>The Times.</cite></div>
-
-
-<p class="pfs90">Also Published:</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">The "Best Edition,"</span> in crown 8vo, with fine Portrait by Count
-<span class="smcap">D'Orsay</span>, cloth extra, 7<em>s.</em> 6<em>d.</em></p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">The "Cheap Edition,"</span> without Portrait, in 16mo, paper wrapper,
-2<em>s.</em></p>
-
-<p><b>Dickens' Life and Speeches</b>, in One Volume, 16mo, cloth extra,
-2<em>s.</em> 6<em>d.</em></p>
-
-
-<hr class="fulla" />
-<p class="pfs80">BALZAC'S CONTES DROLATIQUES.</p>
-
-<p><b><span class="fs160">Droll Stories, collected from the</span>
-Abbeys of Touraine.</b> <span class="smcap">Now first Translated into English,
-Complete and Unabridged</span>, with the whole 425 Marvellous,
-Extravagant, and Fantastic Illustrations (the finest he has ever done)
-by <span class="smcap">Gustave Doré</span>. Beautifully printed, in 8vo, cloth extra, gilt,
-gilt top, 12<em>s.</em> 6<em>d.</em></p>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<img src="images/cat_013.jpg" width="500" alt="" />
-</div>
-
-<div class="blockquotx">
-
-⁂ <em>The most singular designs ever attempted by any artist. So crammed is
-the book with pictures, that even the contents are adorned with thirty-three Illustrations.</em></div>
-
-<div class="blockquotx">
-
-A few copies of the <span class="smcap">French Original</span> are still on sale, bound half-Roxburghe,
-gilt top&mdash;a very handsome book&mdash;price 12<em>s.</em> 6<em>d.</em></div>
-
-
-<hr class="fulla" />
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_14C" id="Page_14C">[14C]</a></span></p>
-
-<p><b><span class="fs160">The Danbury Newsman.</span></b> A Brief but
-Comprehensive Record of the Doings of a Remarkable People, under
-more Remarkable Circumstances, and Chronicled in a most Remarkable
-Manner. By <span class="smcap">James M. Bailey</span>. Uniform with Twain's
-"Screamers." Fcap. 8vo, illustrated cover, 1<em>s.</em></p>
-
-<div class="blockquotx center">
-
-"A real American humorist."&mdash;<cite>Figaro.</cite></div>
-
-
-<hr class="fulla" />
-<p><b><span class="fs160">The Derby Day.</span></b> A Sporting Novel of
-intense interest, by a well-known writer. Fcap. 8vo, illustrated
-cover, 1<em>s.</em></p>
-
-
-<hr class="fulla" />
-<p><b><span class="fs160">Disraeli's (Rt. Hon. B.) Speeches</span></b>
-on the Conservative Policy of the last Thirty Years, including the
-Speech at the Literary Fund Dinner, specially revised by the Author.
-Royal 16mo, paper cover, with Portrait, 1<em>s.</em> 4<em>d.</em>; in cloth, 1<em>s.</em> 10<em>d.</em></p>
-
-
-<hr class="fulla" />
-<p><b><span class="fs160">D'Urfey's ("Tom") Wit and Mirth;</span></b>
-or, <span class="smcap">Pills to Purge Melancholy</span>: Being a Collection of the
-best Merry Ballads and Songs, Old and New. Fitted to all Humours,
-having each their proper Tune for either Voice or Instrument:
-most of the Songs being new set. London: Printed by W.
-Pearson, for J. Tonson, at Shakespeare's Head, over-against Catherine
-Street in the Strand, 1719.</p>
-
-<div class="blockquotx">
-
-An exact and beautiful reprint of this much-prized work, with the
-Music to the Songs, just as in the rare original. In 6 vols., large
-fcap. 8vo, antique boards, edges uncut, beautifully printed on laid
-paper, made expressly for the work, price £3 3<em>s.</em>; or <span class="smcap">Large Paper
-Copies</span> (a limited number only printed), price £5 5<em>s.</em></div>
-
-<div class="blockquotx">
-
-⁂ The <span class="smcap">Pills To Purge Melancholy</span> <em>have now retained their celebrity for a
-century and a half. The difficulty of obtaining a copy has of late years raised sets
-to a fabulous price, and has made even odd volumes costly. Considering the classical
-reputation which the book has thus obtained, and its very high interest as
-illustrative of the manners, customs, and amusements of English life during the
-half century following the Restoration, no apology is needed for placing such a work
-more within the reach of general readers and students by re-issuing it for the first
-time since its original appearance, and at about a tithe of the price for which
-the old edition could now be obtained.</em></div>
-
-<div class="blockquotx">
-
-<em>For drinking-songs and love-songs, sprightly ballads, merry stories, and political
-squibs, there are none to surpass these in the language. In improvising such
-pieces, and in singing them</em>, <span class="smcap">D'urfey</span> <em>was perhaps never equalled, except in our
-own century by</em> <span class="smcap">Theodore Hook</span>. <em>The sallies of his wit amused and delighted
-three successive English sovereigns; and while his plays are forgotten, his songs
-and ballads still retain the light</em> abandon <em>and joyous freshness that recommended
-them to the wits and beaux of Queen Anne's days. Nor can the warm and affectionate
-eulogy of Steele and Addison be forgotten, and</em> <span class="smcap">D'urfey</span> <em>may now take his
-place on the bookshelves of the curious, side by side with the other worthies of
-his age</em>.</div>
-
-
-<hr class="fulla" />
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_15C" id="Page_15C">[15C]</a></span></p>
-
-<p><b><span class="fs160">The Earthward Pilgrimage</span></b>, from the
-Next World to that which now is. By <span class="smcap">Moncure D. Conway</span>.
-Crown 8vo, beautifully printed and bound, 7<em>s.</em> 6<em>d.</em></p>
-
-
-<hr class="fulla" />
-<p><b><span class="fs160">Edgar Allan Poe's Prose and Poetical</span>
-Works</b>; including Additional Tales and the fine Essays by this
-great Genius, now <span class="smcap">First Published in this Country</span>. With
-a Translation of <span class="smcap">Charles Baudelaire's</span> "Essay on Poe." 750
-pages, crown 8vo, with fine Portrait and Illustrations, cloth extra,
-7<em>s.</em> 6<em>d.</em></p>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<img src="images/cat_015.jpg" width="350" alt="" />
-</div>
-
-<p class="pfs90"><span class="smcap">Poe's Cottage at Fordham.</span></p>
-
-
-<hr class="fulla" />
-<p><b><span class="fs160">Mrs. Ellis's Mothers of Great Men.</span></b>
-A New Edition of this well-known Work, with numerous <ins class="corr" title="Transcriber's Note&mdash;Original text: 'very beau-ful'">very beautiful</ins>
-Portraits. Crown 8vo, cloth gilt, over 500 pages, 7<em>s.</em> 6<em>d.</em></p>
-
-<p class="rightx">[<em>In preparation.</em></p>
-
-
-<hr class="fulla" />
-<p class="pfs90 smcap">The Standard Work on the Subject.</p>
-
-<p><b><span class="fs160">Emanuel on Diamonds and Precious</span>
-Stones</b>; Their History, Value, and Properties; with Simple
-Tests for ascertaining their Reality. By <span class="smcap">Harry Emanuel</span>, F.R.G.S.
-With numerous Illustrations, Tinted and Plain. A New Edition,
-with the Prices brought down to the Present Time. Crown 8vo, full
-gilt, 6<em>s.</em></p>
-
-<div class="blockquotx">
-
-"Will be acceptable to many readers."&mdash;<cite>Times.</cite></div>
-
-<div class="blockquotx">
-
-"An invaluable work for buyers and sellers."&mdash;<cite>Spectator.</cite></div>
-
-<div class="blockquotx">
-
-⁂ <em>The present, which is greatly superior to the first edition, gives the latest
-market value for Diamonds and Precious Stones of every size.</em></div>
-
-
-<hr class="fulla" />
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_16C" id="Page_16C">[16C]</a></span></p>
-
-<p><b><span class="fs160">The Englishman's House</span></b>, from a Cottage
-to a Mansion. A Practical Guide to Members of Building
-Societies, and all interested in Selecting or Building a House. By
-<span class="smcap">C. J. Richardson</span>, Architect, Author of "Old English Mansions,"
-&amp;c. Second Edition, Corrected and Enlarged, with nearly 600
-Illustrations. Crown 8vo, 550 pages, cloth, 7<em>s.</em> 6<em>d.</em></p>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<img src="images/cat_016.jpg" width="350" alt="" />
-</div>
-
-<div class="blockquotx">
-
-⁂ <em>This Work might not inappropriately be termed "A Book of Houses." It
-gives every variety of house, from a workman's cottage to a nobleman's palace.
-The book is intended to supply a want long felt, viz., a plain, non-technical
-account of every style of house, with the cost and manner of building.</em></div>
-
-
-<hr class="fulla" />
-<p><b><span class="fs160">Our English Surnames</span></b>: Their Sources
-and Significations. By <span class="smcap">Charles Wareing Bardsley</span>, M.A.
-Crown 8vo, about 600 pages, cloth extra, 9<em>s.</em></p>
-
-
-<hr class="fulla" />
-<p class="pfs90 smcap">Indispensable to every Household.</p>
-
-<p><b><span class="fs160">Everybody Answered.</span></b> A Handy Book
-for All; and a Guide to the Housewife, the Servant, the Cook, the
-Tradesman, the Workman, the Professional Man, the Clerk, &amp;c.,
-&amp;c., in the Duties belonging to their respective Callings. One
-thick volume, crown 8vo, cloth gilt, 4<em>s.</em> 6<em>d.</em></p>
-
-<p class="rightx">[<em>In preparation.</em></p>
-
-
-<hr class="fulla" />
-<p><b><span class="fs160">Family Fairy Tales</span></b>; or, Glimpses of Elfland
-at Heatherstone Hall. Edited by <span class="smcap">Cholmondeley Pennell</span>,
-Author of "Puck on Pegasus," &amp;c. Adorned with beautiful
-Pictures of "My Lord Lion," "King Uggermugger," and other
-Great Folks, by <span class="smcap">M. Ellen Edwards</span>, and other artists. Handsomely
-printed on toned paper, in cloth, green and gold, price 4<em>s.</em> 6<em>d.</em>
-plain, 5<em>s.</em> 6<em>d.</em> coloured.</p>
-
-
-<hr class="fulla" />
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_17C" id="Page_17C">[17C]</a></span></p>
-
-<p><b><span class="fs160">Faraday's Chemical History</span> of a
-Candle.</b> Lectures delivered to a Juvenile Audience. A New
-Edition of this well-known volume, which has been so long out of
-print, Edited by <span class="smcap">W. Crookes</span>, Esq., F.C.S., &amp;c. Crown 8vo,
-cloth extra, with all the Original Illustrations, price 4<em>s.</em> 6<em>d.</em></p>
-
-
-<hr class="fulla" />
-<p><b><span class="fs160">Faraday's Various Forces of Nature.</span></b>
-A New Edition, with all the Original Illustrations, Edited by <span class="smcap">W.
-Crookes</span>, Esq., F.C.S., &amp;c. Crown 8vo, cloth extra, 4<em>s.</em> 6<em>d.</em></p>
-
-
-<hr class="fulla" />
-<p class="pfs90">FLAGELLATION AND THE FLAGELLANTS.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<img src="images/cat_017.jpg" width="400" alt="" />
-</div>
-
-<p><b><span class="fs160">A History of the Rod</span></b> in all Countries,
-from the Earliest Period to the Present Time. The use of the Rod
-in the Church, Convent, Monastery, Prison, Army, Navy, in public
-and private; the use of the Birch in the Family, Ladies' Seminaries,
-Boys' Schools, Colleges, the Boudoir, Ancient and Modern. By the
-Rev. <span class="smcap">W. Cooper</span>, B.A. Second Edition, revised and corrected,
-with numerous Illustrations. Thick crown 8vo, cloth extra gilt, 12<em>s.</em> 6<em>d.</em></p>
-
-<div class="blockquotx">
-
-"A remarkable, and certainly a very readable volume."&mdash;<cite>Daily Telegraph.</cite></div>
-
-
-<hr class="fulla" />
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_18C" id="Page_18C">[18C]</a></span></p>
-
-<p><b><span class="fs160">The Fiend's Delight</span></b>: A "Cold Collation"
-of Atrocities. By <span class="smcap">Dod Grile</span>. New Edition, in illustrated
-wrapper, fcap. 8vo, 1<em>s.</em>; or crown 8vo, cloth extra, 3<em>s.</em> 6<em>d.</em></p>
-
-<div class="blockquotx">
-
-"A specimen of 'American Humour' as unlike that of all other American
-humourists, as the play of young human Merry-Andrews is unlike that of a young
-and energetic demon whose horns are well budded."&mdash;<cite>New York Nation.</cite></div>
-
-
-<hr class="fulla" />
-<p><b><span class="fs160">The Finish to Life in and out of</span>
-London</b>; or, The Final Adventures of Tom, Jerry, and Logic.
-By <span class="smcap">Pierce Egan</span>. Royal 8vo, cloth extra, with Spirited Coloured
-Illustrations by <span class="smcap">Cruikshank</span>, 21<em>s.</em></p>
-
-<div class="blockquotx">
-
-⁂ <em>An extraordinary picture of</em> "<span class="smcap">London by Night</span>" <em>in the Days of George
-the Fourth. All the strange places of amusement in the neighbourhood of Covent
-Garden and St. James's are fully described, and very queer places they were too!</em></div>
-
-
-<hr class="fulla" />
-<p class="center fs90"><span class="smcap">Walk up! Walk up! and see the</span><br />
-
-<b><span class="fs180">Fools' Paradise</span></b>; with the Many Wonderful
-Adventures there, as seen in the strange, surprising<br />
-
-<b>PEEP-SHOW OF PROFESSOR WOLLEY COBBLE</b>,<br />
-Raree Showman these Five-and-Twenty Years.</p>
-
-<div class="blockquotx">
-
-Crown 4to, with nearly 200 immensely funny Pictures, all beautifully
-coloured, bound in extra cloth gilt, price 7<em>s.</em> 6<em>d.</em></div>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<img src="images/cat_018.jpg" width="350" alt="" />
-</div>
-
-<p class="pfs80 smcap">The Professor's Leetle Music Lesson.</p>
-
-<hr class="r30a" />
-
-<p class="center fs90"><span class="smcap">A Second Series is now Ready, called</span><br />
-
-<b><span class="fs180">Further Adventures in Fools' Paradise</span></b>,
-with the Many Wonderful Doings, as seen in the<br />
-
-<b>PEEP-SHOW OF PROFESSOR WOLLEY COBBLE</b>.</p>
-
-<div class="blockquotx">
-
-Crown 4to, with the Pictures beautifully Coloured, uniform with the
-<span class="smcap">First Series</span>, in extra cloth gilt, price 7<em>s.</em> 6<em>d.</em></div>
-
-
-<hr class="fulla" />
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_19C" id="Page_19C">[19C]</a></span></p>
-
-<p class="pfs90 smcap">A Companion to all French
-Dictionaries.</p>
-
-<p><b><span class="fs160">French Slang</span></b>; or
-Eccentricities of the French Language.</p>
-
-<p class="pfs80"><br />A DICTIONARY OF</p>
-
-<p><b><span class="fs100">PARISIAN ARGOT</span></b>,
-including all recent expressions,
-whether of the Street, the
-Theatre, or the Prison. Handsomely
-bound in half-Roxburghe,
-illustrated with 30
-large Wood Engravings. Price
-7<em>s.</em> 6<em>d.</em></p>
-
-<div class="blockquotx">
-
-⁂ <em>This book is indispensable to all
-readers of modern French literature.
-It is, besides, amusing in itself,
-and may be taken up to while away
-an idle half-hour. It does for French
-what our "Slang Dictionary" does for
-English.</em></div>
-
-
-<hr class="fulla" />
-<div class="figright">
-<img src="images/cat_019b.jpg" width="250" alt="" />
-</div>
-
-<p><b><span class="fs160">Fun for the Million</span></b>:
-A Gathering of Choice
-Wit and Humour, Good
-Things, and Sublime Nonsense,
-by <span class="smcap">Dickens</span>, <span class="smcap">Jerrold</span>,
-<span class="smcap">Sam Slick</span>, <span class="smcap">Chas.
-H. Ross</span>, <span class="smcap">Hood</span>, <span class="smcap">Theodore
-Hook</span>, <span class="smcap">Mark Twain</span>,
-<span class="smcap">Brough</span>, <span class="smcap">Colman</span>, <span class="smcap">Titus
-A. Brick</span>, and a Host of
-other Humourists. With
-Pictures by <span class="smcap">Matt Morgan</span>,
-<span class="smcap">Gilbert</span>, <span class="smcap">Nast</span>,
-<span class="smcap">Thompson</span>, <span class="smcap">Cruikshank</span>,
-Jun., <span class="smcap">Brunton</span>, &amp;c. In
-fcap. 4to, profusely illustrated,
-with picture wrapper,
-1<em>s.</em></p>
-
-
-<hr class="fulla" />
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_20C" id="Page_20C">[20C]</a></span></p>
-
-<p><b><span class="fs160">The Genial Showman</span></b>; or, Show Life
-in the New World. Adventures with Artemus Ward, and the Story
-of his Life. By <span class="smcap">E. P. Hingston</span>. Third Edition. Crown 8vo, Illustrated
-by <span class="smcap">Brunton</span>, cloth extra, 7<em>s.</em> 6<em>d.</em></p>
-
-<div class="blockquotx">
-
-⁂ <em>This is a most interesting work. It gives Sketches of Show-Life in the Far
-West, on the Pacific Coast, among the Mines of California, in Salt Lake City,
-and across the Rocky Mountains; with chapters descriptive of Artemus Ward's
-visit to England.</em></div>
-
-
-<hr class="fulla" />
-<p class="pfs80">RUSKIN AND CRUIKSHANK.</p>
-
-<p><b><span class="fs160">German Popular Stories.</span></b> Collected by
-the Brothers <span class="smcap">Grimm</span>, and Translated by <span class="smcap">Edgar Taylor</span>. Edited
-by <span class="smcap">John Ruskin</span>. With 22 Illustrations after the inimitable
-designs of <span class="smcap">George Cruikshank</span>. Both Series complete. Square
-crown 8vo, 6<em>s.</em> 6<em>d.</em>; gilt leaves, 7<em>s.</em> 6<em>d.</em></p>
-
-<div class="blockquotx">
-
-⁂ <em>These are the designs which Mr. Ruskin has praised so highly, placing them
-far above all Cruikshank's other works of a similar character. So rare had the
-original book (published in 1823-1826) become, that £5 to £6 per copy was an ordinary
-price. By the consent of Mr. Taylor's family a New Edition is now issued,
-under the care and superintendence of the printers who issued the originals forty
-years ago. A few copies for sale on Large Paper, price 21s.</em></div>
-
-
-<hr class="fulla" />
-<p><b><span class="fs160">Gesta Romanorum</span></b>; or, Entertaining
-Stories, invented by the Monks as a Fireside Recreation, and commonly
-applied in their Discourses from the Pulpit. A New Edition,
-with Introduction by <span class="smcap">Thomas Wright</span>, Esq., M.A., F.S.A. Two
-vols. large fcap. 8vo, only 250 copies printed, on fine ribbed paper,
-18<em>s.</em>; or, <span class="smcap">Large Paper Edition</span> (only a few copies printed), 30<em>s.</em></p>
-
-
-<hr class="fulla" />
-<p><b><span class="fs160">Gladstone's (Rt. Hon. W. E.) Speeches</span></b>
-on Great Questions of the Day during the last Thirty Years. Collated
-with the best public reports. Royal 16mo, paper cover, 1<em>s.</em> 4<em>d.</em>;
-cloth extra, 1<em>s.</em> 10<em>d.</em></p>
-
-
-<hr class="fulla" />
-<p><b><span class="fs160">Golden Treasury of Thought.</span></b> The Best
-Encyclopædia of Quotations and Elegant Extracts, from Writers of
-all Times and all Countries, ever formed. Selected and Edited by
-<span class="smcap">Theodore Taylor</span>, Author of "Thackeray, the Humourist and
-Man of Letters," "Story of Charles Dickens' Life." Crown 8vo,
-very handsomely bound, cloth gilt, and gilt edges, 7<em>s.</em> 6<em>d.</em></p>
-
-<div class="blockquotx">
-
-⁂ <em>An attempt to put into the hands of the reader and student a
-more varied and complete collection of the best thoughts of the
-best authors than had before been made. It is not everybody who
-can get the original works from which the extracts are taken,
-while a book, such as this is within the reach of all, and cannot
-be opened without finding something worth reading, and in most
-cases worth remembering.</em></div>
-
-
-<hr class="fulla" />
-<p><b><span class="fs160">Grose's Dictionary of the Vulgar</span>
-Tongue.</b> 1785. A genuine unmutilated Reprint of the First Edition.
-Quarto, bound in half-Roxburghe, gilt top, price 8<em>s.</em></p>
-
-<div class="blockquotx">
-
-⁂ <em>Only a small number of copies of this very vulgar, but very curious, book
-have been printed, for the Collectors of "Street Words" and Colloquialisms.</em></div>
-
-
-<hr class="fulla" />
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_21C" id="Page_21C">[21C]</a></span></p>
-
-<p><b><span class="fs160">Hall's (Mrs. S. C.) Sketches of Irish</span>
-Character.</b> With numerous Illustrations on Steel and Wood, by
-<span class="smcap">Daniel Maclise</span>, R.A., Sir <span class="smcap">John Gilbert</span>, <span class="smcap">W. Harvey</span>, and
-<span class="smcap">G. Cruikshank</span>. 8vo, pp. 450, cloth extra, 7<em>s.</em> 6<em>d.</em></p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 350px;">
-<img src="images/cat_021.jpg" width="350" height="382" alt="" />
-</div>
-
-<div class="blockquotx">
-
-"The Irish sketches of this lady resemble Miss Mitford's beautiful English
-Sketches in 'Our Village,' but they are far more vigorous and picturesque and
-bright."&mdash;<cite>Blackwood's Magazine.</cite></div>
-
-
-<hr class="fulla" />
-<p class="pfs90 smcap">Companion to "The Secret Out."</p>
-
-<p><b><span class="fs160">Hanky-Panky.</span></b> A New and Wonderful
-Book of Very Easy Tricks, Very Difficult Tricks, White
-Magic, Sleight of Hand; in fact, all those startling Deceptions
-which the Great Wizards call "Hanky-Panky." Edited by <span class="smcap">W. H.
-Cremer</span>, of Regent Street. With nearly 200 Illustrations. Crown
-8vo, cloth extra, price 4<em>s.</em> 6<em>d.</em></p>
-
-
-<hr class="fulla" />
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_22C" id="Page_22C">[22C]</a></span></p>
-
-<p><b><span class="fs160">Hans Breitmann's Ballads.</span></b> By <span class="smcap">J. G.
-Leland</span>. The Complete Work, from the Author's revised Edition.
-Royal 16mo, paper cover, 1<em>s.</em>; in cloth, 1<em>s.</em> 6<em>d.</em></p>
-
-
-<hr class="fulla" />
-<div class="figleft">
-<img src="images/cat_022.jpg" width="250" alt="" />
-</div>
-
-<p><b><span class="fs160">Hatton's (Jos.)</span>
-Kites and Pigeons.</b> A
-most amusing Novelette.
-With Illustrations by <span class="smcap">Linley
-Sambourne</span>, of "Punch."
-Fcap. 8vo, illustrated wrapper,
-1<em>s.</em></p>
-
-<p class="pfs70">&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;</p>
-
-<p><b><span class="fs160">Hawthorne's</span>
-English and American
-Note Books.</b> Edited,
-with an Introduction, by
-<span class="smcap">Moncure D. Conway</span>.
-Royal 16mo, paper cover,
-1<em>s.</em>; in cloth, 1<em>s.</em> 6<em>d.</em></p>
-
-
-<hr class="fulla" />
-<p><b><span class="fs160">Holidays with Hobgoblins</span></b>, and Talk of
-Strange Things. By <span class="smcap">Dudley Costello</span>. Fcap. 8vo, illustrated
-boards, with Picture by <span class="smcap">George Cruikshank</span>. 2<em>s.</em></p>
-
-
-<hr class="fulla" />
-<p class="pfs80">OLIVER WENDELL HOLMES' WORKS.</p>
-
-<p><b><span class="fs160">Holmes' Autocrat of the Breakfast</span>
-Table.</b> An entirely New Edition of this Favourite Work. Royal
-16mo, paper cover, 1<em>s.</em>; in cloth, neat, 1<em>s.</em> 6<em>d.</em></p>
-
-
-<hr class="r30a" />
-<p><b><span class="fs160">Holmes' Poet at the Breakfast Table.</span></b>
-From January to June. Paper cover, 1<em>s.</em></p>
-
-
-<hr class="r30a" />
-<p><b><span class="fs160">Holmes' Professor at the Breakfast</span>
-Table.</b> A Companion Volume to the "Autocrat of the Breakfast
-Table." Royal 16mo, paper cover, 1<em>s.</em>; cloth neat, 1<em>s.</em> 6<em>d.</em></p>
-
-
-<hr class="r30a" />
-<p><b><span class="fs160">Holmes' Wit and Humour.</span></b> Delightful
-Verses, in the style of the elder Hood. Fcap. 8vo, illustrated
-wrapper, 1<em>s.</em></p>
-
-
-<hr class="fulla" />
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_23C" id="Page_23C">[23C]</a></span></p>
-
-<p class="pfs80">THE MOST COMPLETE HOGARTH EVER PUBLISHED</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<img src="images/cat_023.jpg" width="200" alt="" />
-</div>
-
-<p><b><span class="fs160">Hogarth's Works</span></b>; with Life and Anecdotal
-Descriptions of the Pictures, by <span class="smcap">John Ireland</span> and <span class="smcap">John Nichols</span>.
-The Work includes 150 Engravings, reduced in exact facsimile of
-the Original Plates, specimens of which have now become very
-scarce. The whole in Three Series, 8vo, cloth, gilt, 22<em>s.</em> 6<em>d.</em> Each
-series is, however, Complete in itself, and is sold separately at
-7<em>s.</em> 6<em>d.</em></p>
-
-
-<hr class="fulla" />
-<p><b><span class="fs160">Hogarth's Five Days' Frolic</span></b>; or, Peregrinations
-by Land and Water. Illustrated with Tinted Drawings,
-made by <span class="smcap">Hogarth</span> and <span class="smcap">Scott</span> during the Journey. 4to, beautifully
-printed, cloth, extra gilt, 10<em>s.</em> 6<em>d.</em></p>
-
-<div class="blockquotx">
-
-⁂ <em>A graphic and most extraordinary picture of the hearty English times
-in which these merry artists lived.</em></div>
-
-
-<hr class="fulla" />
-<p><b><span class="fs160">Hood's Whims and Oddities.</span></b> The
-Entire Work. Now issued Complete, the Two Parts in One Volume,
-with all the Humorous Designs. Royal 16mo, paper cover, 1<em>s.</em>; cloth
-neat, 1<em>s.</em> 6<em>d.</em></p>
-
-
-<hr class="fulla" />
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_24C" id="Page_24C">[24C]</a></span></p>
-
-<p><b><span class="fs160">Hunt's (Leigh) Tale for a Chimney</span>
-Corner</b>, and other charming Essays. With Introduction by <span class="smcap">Edmund
-Ollier</span>, and Portrait supplied by the late <span class="smcap">Thornton Hunt</span>.
-Royal 16mo, paper cover, 1<em>s.</em> 4<em>d.</em>; cloth neat, 1<em>s.</em> 10<em>d.</em></p>
-
-
-<hr class="fulla" />
-<p><b><span class="fs160">Hunt's (Robert, F.R.S.) Drolls of Old</span>
-Cornwall</b>; or, <span class="smcap">Popular Romances of the West of England</span>.
-New Edition, Complete in One Volume, with Illustrations
-by <span class="smcap">George Cruikshank</span>. Crown 8vo, extra cloth gilt,
-7<em>s.</em> 6<em>d.</em></p>
-
-<div class="blockquotx">
-
-⁂ "Mr. Hunt's charming book on the Drolls and Stories of the West of
-England."&mdash;<cite>Saturday Review.</cite></div>
-
-
-<hr class="fulla" />
-<div class="figleft">
-<img src="images/cat_024.jpg" width="170" alt="" />
-</div>
-
-<p><b><span class="fs160">Jennings' (Hargrave)</span>
-One of the Thirty.</b> With curious Illustrations.
-Crown 8vo, cloth extra, 10<em>s.</em> 6<em>d.</em></p>
-
-<div class="blockquotx">
-
-⁂ <em>An extraordinary narrative, tracing down
-one of the accursed pieces of silver for which Jesus of
-Nazareth was sold. Through eighteen centuries is
-this fated coin tracked, now in the possession of the
-innocent, now in the grasp of the guilty, but everywhere
-carrying with it the evil that fell upon Judas.</em></div>
-
-<p class="pfs70">&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;</p>
-
-<p><b><span class="fs160">Jennings' (Hargrave)</span>
-The Rosicrucians: Their Rites and
-Mysteries.</b> With chapters on the Ancient Fire and Serpent
-Worshippers, and Explanations of the Mystic Symbols represented
-in the Monuments and Talismans of the Primeval Philosophers.
-Crown 8vo, cloth extra, with about 300 Illustrations, 10<em>s.</em> 6<em>d.</em></p>
-
-
-<hr class="fulla" />
-<p><b><span class="fs160">Joe Miller's Jests</span></b>; or, The Wit's Vade
-Mecum. Being a collection of the most brilliant Jests, the politest
-Repartees, the most elegant Bon-Mots, and most pleasant short
-Stories in the English Language. London: Printed by T. Read,
-1739. A remarkable facsimile of the very rare <span class="smcap">Original Edition</span>.
-8vo, half-Roxburghe, 9<em>s.</em> 6<em>d.</em></p>
-
-<div class="blockquotx">
-
-⁂ <em>Only a very few copies of this humorous and racy old book have been reproduced.</em></div>
-
-
-<hr class="fulla" />
-<p><b><span class="fs160">Josh Billings: His Book of Sayings.</span></b>
-With Introduction by <span class="smcap">E. P. Hingston</span>, Companion of Artemus
-Ward when on his "Travels." Fcap. 8vo, illustrated cover, 1<em>s.</em></p>
-
-
-<hr class="fulla" />
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_25C" id="Page_25C">[25C]</a></span></p>
-
-<p><b><span class="fs160">Kalendars of Gwynedd</span></b>; or, Chronological
-Lists of Lords-Lieutenant, Sheriffs and Knights for Anglesey,
-Caernarvon, and Merioneth. With Lists of the Lords-Presidents of
-Wales, and the Constables of the Castles of Beaumaris, Caernarvon,
-Conway, and Harlech. Compiled by <span class="smcap">Edward Breese</span>, F.S.A.
-With Notes by <span class="smcap">William Watkin Edward Wynne</span>, Esq., F.S.A.,
-of Penairth. Only a limited number printed. One volume, demy
-4to, cloth extra, 28<em>s.</em></p>
-
-
-<hr class="fulla" />
-<p><b><span class="fs160">Lamb's (Charles) Essays of Elia.</span></b> The
-Complete Work. Beautifully printed, and uniform with the "Essays
-of Leigh Hunt." Royal 16mo, paper cover, 1<em>s.</em>; cloth neat, 1<em>s.</em> 6<em>d.</em></p>
-
-
-<hr class="fulla" />
-<p><b><span class="fs160">Leigh's Carols of Cockayne.</span></b> Vers de
-Société, mostly descriptive of London Life. By <span class="smcap">Henry S. Leigh</span>.
-With numerous exquisite Designs by <span class="smcap">Alfred Concanen</span> and the
-late <span class="smcap">John Leech</span>. Small 4to, elegant, uniform with "Puniana,"
-6<em>s.</em></p>
-
-
-<hr class="fulla" />
-<p class="pfs90 smcap">Uniform with "Dr. Syntax."</p>
-
-<div class="figleft">
-<img src="images/cat_025.jpg" width="170" alt="" />
-</div>
-
-<p><b><span class="fs160">Life in London</span></b>; or,
-The Day and Night Scenes of Jerry
-Hawthorn and Corinthian Tom. <span class="smcap">With
-the whole of Cruikshank's very
-Droll Illustrations</span>, in Colours,
-after the Originals. Crown 8vo, cloth
-extra, 7<em>s.</em> 6<em>d.</em></p>
-
-<div class="blockquotx">
-
-⁂ <em>One of the most popular books ever issued.
-It was an immense favourite with George IV.,
-and as a picture of London life fifty years ago
-was often quoted by Thackeray, who devotes one
-of his "Roundabout Papers" to a description of it.</em></div>
-
-
-<hr class="fulla" />
-<p><b><span class="fs160">Literary Scraps.</span></b> A Folio Scrap-Book of
-340 columns, with guards, for the reception of Cuttings from Newspapers,
-Extracts, Miscellanea, &amp;c. A very useful book. In folio,
-half-roan, cloth sides, 7<em>s.</em> 6<em>d.</em></p>
-
-
-<hr class="fulla" />
-<p><b><span class="fs160">Little Breeches</span></b>, and other Pieces (<span class="smcap">Pike
-County Ballads</span>). By Colonel <span class="smcap">John Hay</span>. Foolscap 8vo, illustrated
-cover, 1<em>s.</em> 6<em>d.</em></p>
-
-
-<hr class="fulla" />
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_26C" id="Page_26C">[26C]</a></span></p>
-
-<p><b><span class="fs160">The Little London Directory of 1677.</span></b>
-The Oldest Printed List of the Merchants and Bankers of London.
-Reprinted from the Exceedingly Rare Original, with an Introduction
-by <span class="smcap">John Camden Hotten</span>. 16mo, in a beautiful binding, after
-the original, 6<em>s.</em> 6<em>d.</em></p>
-
-
-<hr class="fulla" />
-<p><b><span class="fs160">The Log of the Water Lily</span></b>, during Three
-Cruises on the Rhine, Neckar, Main, Moselle, Danube, Saone, and
-Rhone. By <span class="smcap">R. B. Mansfield</span>, B.A. Illustrated by <span class="smcap">Alfred
-Thompson</span>, B.A. Fifth Edition, revised and considerably enlarged.
-Crown 8vo, cloth extra, gilt, 5<em>s.</em></p>
-
-
-<hr class="fulla" />
-<div class="figleft">
-<img src="images/cat_026.jpg" width="170" alt="" />
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="lht"><b><span class="fs160">Longfellow's Prose</span>
-Works</b>, Complete, including his
-Stories and Essays, now for the
-first time collected. Edited, with
-an Introduction, by the Author of "Tennysoniana."
-With Portrait and
-Illustrations, drawn by <span class="smcap">Valentine
-Bromley</span>, and beautifully engraved,
-650 pages, crown 8vo, cloth gilt,
-7<em>s.</em> 6<em>d.</em></span></p>
-
-
-<hr class="fulla" />
-<p><b><span class="fs160">Lost Beauties of the English Language.</span></b>
-An Appeal to Authors, Poets, Clergymen, and Public Speakers;
-with an Introductory Essay. By <span class="smcap">Charles Mackay</span>, LL.D. In
-crown 8vo, cloth extra, uniform with the "Slang Dictionary," 6<em>s.</em> 6<em>d.</em></p>
-
-
-<hr class="fulla" />
-<p class="pfs90 smcap">Uniform with "The Magician's Own Book."</p>
-
-<p><b><span class="fs160">Magic and Mystery.</span></b> A Splendid Collection
-of Tricks with Cards, Dice, Balls, &amp;c., with fully descriptive
-working Directions. Crown 8vo, with numerous Illustrations, cloth
-extra, 4<em>s.</em> 6<em>d.</em></p>
-
-<p class="rightx">[<em>Preparing.</em></p>
-
-
-<hr class="fulla" />
-<p class="pfs90 smcap">Companion to "The Secret Out."</p>
-
-<p><b><span class="fs160">The Magician's Own Book.</span></b> Containing
-ample Instructions for Performances in Legerdemain with Cups and
-Balls, Eggs, Hats, Handkerchiefs, &amp;c. All from Actual Experience.
-Edited by <span class="smcap">W. H. Cremer</span>, Jun., of Regent Street. Cloth extra,
-with 200 Illustrations, 4<em>s.</em> 6<em>d.</em></p>
-
-
-<hr class="fulla" />
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_27C" id="Page_27C">[27C]</a></span></p>
-
-<p class="pfs120">MARK TWAIN'S WORKS.</p>
-<hr class="r30a" />
-
-<p><b><span class="fs160">Mark Twain's Choice Works.</span></b> With
-extra passages to the "Innocents Abroad," now first reprinted, and
-a Life of the Author. 50 Illustrations by <span class="smcap">Mark Twain</span> and other
-Artists, and Portrait of the Author. 700 pages, cloth gilt, 7<em>s.</em> 6<em>d.</em></p>
-
-
-<hr class="r30a" />
-<div class="figleft">
-<img src="images/cat_027.jpg" width="200" alt="" />
-</div>
-
-<p><b><span class="fs160">Mark Twain's Innocents</span>
-Abroad</b>: The Voyage Out.
-Crown 8vo, cloth, fine toned paper,
-3<em>s.</em> 6<em>d.</em>; or fcap. 8vo, illustrated
-wrapper, 1<em>s.</em></p>
-
-<p class="pfs70">&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;</p>
-
-<p><b><span class="fs160">Mark Twain's New</span>
-Pilgrim's Progress</b>: The Voyage
-Home. Crown 8vo, cloth, fine
-toned paper, 3<em>s.</em> 6<em>d.</em>; or fcap. 8vo,
-illustrated wrapper, 1<em>s.</em></p>
-
-<p class="pfs70">&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;</p>
-
-<p><b><span class="fs160">Mark Twain's Burlesque</span>
-Autobiography</b>, First
-Mediæval Romance, and on Children. Fcap. 8vo, illustrated cover, 6<em>d.</em></p>
-
-
-<hr class="r30a" />
-<p><b><span class="fs160">Mark Twain's Eye-Openers.</span></b> A Volume
-of immensely Funny Sayings, and Stories that will bring a smile upon
-the gruffest countenance. Fcap. 8vo, illustrated wrapper, 1<em>s.</em></p>
-
-
-<hr class="r30a" />
-<p><b><span class="fs160">Mark Twain's Jumping Frog</span></b>, and other
-Humorous Sketches. Fcap. 8vo, illustrated cover, 1<em>s.</em></p>
-
-<div class="blockquotx center">
-
-"An inimitably funny book."&mdash;<cite>Saturday Review.</cite></div>
-
-
-<hr class="r30a" />
-<p><b><span class="fs160">Mark Twain's Pleasure Trip</span> on the
-Continent of Europe.</b> (The "Innocents Abroad" and "New
-Pilgrim's Progress" in one volume.) 500 pages, paper boards, 2<em>s.</em>;
-or in cloth, 2<em>s.</em> 6<em>d.</em></p>
-
-
-<hr class="r30a" />
-<p><b><span class="fs160">Mark Twain's Practical Jokes</span></b>; or,
-Mirth with Artemus Ward, and other Papers. By <span class="smcap">Mark Twain</span>,
-and other Humorists. Fcap. 8vo, illustrated cover, 1<em>s.</em></p>
-
-
-<hr class="r30a" />
-<p><b><span class="fs160">Mark Twain's Screamers.</span></b> A Gathering
-of Delicious Bits and Short Stories. Fcap. 8vo, illustrated cover, 1<em>s.</em></p>
-
-
-<hr class="fulla" />
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_28C" id="Page_28C">[28C]</a></span></p>
-
-<p><b><span class="fs160">Mayhew's London Characters:</span></b> Illustrations
-of the Humour, Pathos, and Peculiarities of London Life.
-By <span class="smcap">Henry Mayhew</span>, Author of "London Labour and the London
-Poor," and other Writers. With nearly 100 graphic Illustrations.
-Crown 8vo, cloth gilt, about 500 pages, 7<em>s.</em> 6<em>d.</em></p>
-
-<p class="rightx">[<em>Preparing.</em></p>
-
-
-<hr class="fulla" />
-<p><b><span class="fs160">Magna Charta.</span></b> An exact Facsimile of the
-Original Document, preserved in the British Museum, very carefully
-drawn, and printed on fine plate paper, nearly 3 feet long by 2 feet
-wide, with the Arms and Seals of the Barons elaborately emblazoned
-in Gold and Colours. <span class="fs70">A.D.</span> 1215. Price 5<em>s.</em>; or, handsomely framed
-and glazed, in carved oak, of an antique pattern, 22<em>s.</em> 6<em>d.</em></p>
-
-<p class="center">A full Translation, with Notes, has been prepared, price 6<em>d.</em></p>
-
-
-<hr class="fulla" />
-<p class="pfs80">ENTIRELY NEW GAMES.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<img src="images/cat_028.jpg" width="400" alt="" />
-</div>
-
-<p><b><span class="fs160">The Merry Circle</span></b>, and How the Visitors
-were entertained during Twelve Pleasant Evenings. A Book of
-New Intellectual Games and Amusements. Edited by Mrs. <span class="smcap">Clara
-Bellew</span>. Crown 8vo, numerous Illustrations, cloth extra, 4<em>s.</em> 6<em>d.</em></p>
-
-<div class="blockquotx">
-
-⁂ <em>A capital Book of Household Amusements, which will please both old and
-young. It is an excellent book to consult before going to an evening party.</em></div>
-
-
-<hr class="fulla" />
-<p><b><span class="fs160">Monumental Inscriptions of the West</span>
-Indies</b>, from the Earliest Date, with Genealogical and Historical
-Annotations, &amp;c., from Original, Local, and other Sources. Illustrative
-of the Histories and Genealogies of the Seventeenth Century,
-the Calendars of State Papers, Peerages, and Baronetages. With
-Engravings of the Arms of the principal Families. Chiefly collected
-on the spot by the Author, Capt. <span class="smcap">J. H. Lawrence-Archer</span>. One
-volume, demy 4to, about 300 pages, cloth extra, 21<em>s.</em></p>
-
-
-<hr class="fulla" />
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_29C" id="Page_29C">[29C]</a></span></p>
-
-<p><b><span class="fs160">Mr. Brown on the Goings-on of Mrs.</span>
-Brown</b> at the Tichborne Trial, &amp;c. Fcap. 8vo, illustrated cover, 1<em>s.</em></p>
-
-
-<hr class="fulla" />
-<p><b><span class="fs160">Mr. Sprouts: His Opinions.</span></b> Fcap. 8vo,
-illustrated cover, 1<em>s.</em></p>
-
-
-<hr class="fulla" />
-<p class="pfs90 smcap">Uniform with "Tom D'Urfey's Pills."</p>
-
-<p><b><span class="fs160">Musarum Deliciæ</span></b>; or, The Muses' Recreation,
-1656; Wit Restor'd, 1658; and Wit's Recreations, 1640.
-The whole compared with the originals; with all the Wood Engravings,
-Plates, Memoirs, and Notes. A New Edition, in 2 volumes,
-post 8vo, beautifully printed on antique laid paper, and bound in
-antique boards, 21<em>s.</em> A few Large Paper copies have been prepared,
-price 35<em>s.</em></p>
-
-<div class="blockquotx">
-
-⁂ <em>Of the Poets of the Restoration, there are none whose works are more rare
-than those of Sir John Mennis and Dr. James Smith. The small volume entitled
-"Musarum Deliciæ; or, The Muses' Recreation," which contains the productions
-of these two friends, was not accessible to Mr. Freeman when he compiled his
-"Kentish Poets," and has since become so rare that it is only found in the cabinets
-of the curious. A reprint of the "Musarum Deliciæ," together with several other
-kindred pieces of the period, appeared in 1817, forming two volumes of Facetiæ,
-edited by Mr. E. Dubois, author of "The Wreath," &amp;c. These volumes having in
-turn become exceedingly scarce, the Publishers venture to put forth the present new
-edition, in which, while nothing has been omitted, no pains have been spared to
-render it more complete and elegant than any that has yet appeared. The type,
-plates, and woodcuts of the originals have been accurately followed; the notes of
-the Editor of 1817 are considerably augmented, and indexes have been added,
-together with a portrait of Sir John Mennis, from a painting by Vandyke in Lord
-Clarendon's Collection.</em></div>
-
-
-<hr class="fulla" />
-<p><b><span class="fs160">The Mystery of Mr. E. Drood.</span></b> An
-Adaptation. By <span class="smcap">Orpheus C. Kerr</span>. Fcap. 8vo, illustrated
-cover, 1<em>s.</em></p>
-
-
-<hr class="fulla" />
-<p><b><span class="fs160">The Mystery of the Good Old Cause:</span></b>
-Sarcastic Notices of those Members of the Long Parliament that
-held Places, both Civil and Military, contrary to the Self-denying
-Ordinance of April 3, 1645; with the Sums of Money and Lands
-they divided among themselves. Small 4to, half-morocco, 7<em>s.</em> 6<em>d.</em></p>
-
-
-<hr class="fulla" />
-<p><b><span class="fs160">Never Caught in Blockade-Running.</span></b>
-An exciting book of Adventures during the American Civil War.
-Fcap. 8vo, illustrated cover, 1<em>s.</em></p>
-
-
-<hr class="fulla" />
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_30C" id="Page_30C">[30C]</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 400px;">
-<img src="images/cat_030.jpg" width="400" height="324" alt="" />
-</div>
-
-<p><b><span class="fs160">Napoleon III., the Man of His Time;</span></b>
-from Caricatures. <span class="smcap">Part I. The Story of the Life of Napoleon
-III.</span>, as told by <span class="smcap">J. M. Haswell</span>.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap pad2">Part II. The Same Story</span>, as told by the <span class="smcap">Popular Caricatures</span>
-of the past Thirty-five Years. Crown 8vo, with Coloured
-Frontispiece and over 100 Caricatures, 400 pp., 7<em>s.</em> 6<em>d.</em></p>
-
-<div class="blockquotx">
-
-⁂ <em>The object of this Work is to give Both Sides of the Story. The Artist has
-gone over the entire ground of Continental and English Caricatures for the last
-third of a century, and a very interesting book is the result.</em></div>
-
-
-<hr class="fulla" />
-<p><b><span class="fs160">Nuggets and Dust</span></b>, panned out in California
-by <span class="smcap">Dod Grile</span>. Selected and edited by <span class="smcap">J. Milton Sloluck</span>. A new
-style of Humour and Satire. Fcap. 8vo, illustrated cover, 1<em>s.</em></p>
-
-<div class="blockquotx">
-
-⁂ <em>If Artemus Ward may be considered the Douglas Jerrold, and Mark
-Twain the Sydney Smith of America, Dod Grile will rank as their Dean Swift.</em></div>
-
-
-<hr class="fulla" />
-<p><b><span class="fs160">The Old Prose Stories</span></b> whence <span class="smcap">Tennyson's</span>
-"Idylls of the King" were taken. By <span class="smcap">B. M. Ranking</span>. Royal
-16mo, paper cover, 1<em>s.</em>; cloth extra, 1<em>s.</em> 6<em>d.</em></p>
-
-
-<hr class="fulla" />
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_31C" id="Page_31C">[31C]</a></span></p>
-
-<p class="pfs80">THE OLD DRAMATISTS.</p>
-
-<p><b><span class="fs160">Ben Jonson's Works.</span></b> With Notes, Critical
-and Explanatory, and a Biographical Memoir by <span class="smcap">William
-Gifford</span>. Edited by Lieut.-Col. <span class="smcap">Francis Cunningham</span>. Complete
-in 3 vols., crown 8vo, Portrait. Cloth, 6<em>s.</em> each; cloth gilt,
-6<em>s.</em> 6<em>d.</em> each.</p>
-
-
-<hr class="r30a" />
-<p><b><span class="fs160">George Chapman's Plays</span></b>, Complete, from
-the Original Quartos. With an Introduction by <span class="smcap">Algernon Charles
-Swinburne</span>. Crown 8vo, Portrait. Cloth, 6<em>s.</em>; cloth gilt, 6<em>s.</em> 6<em>d.</em></p>
-
-<p class="rightx">[<em>In preparation.</em></p>
-
-
-<hr class="r30a" />
-<p><b><span class="fs160">Christopher Marlowe's Works:</span></b> Including
-his Translations. Edited, with Notes and Introduction,
-by Lieut.-Col. <span class="smcap">F. Cunningham</span>. Crown 8vo, Portrait. Cloth, 6<em>s.</em>;
-cloth gilt, 6<em>s.</em> 6<em>d.</em></p>
-
-
-<hr class="r30a" />
-<p><b><span class="fs160">Philip Massinger's Plays.</span></b> From the
-Text of <span class="smcap">Wm. Gifford</span>. With the addition of the Tragedy of
-"Believe as You List." Edited by Lieut.-Col. <span class="smcap">Francis Cunningham</span>.
-Crown 8vo, Portrait. Cloth, 6<em>s.</em>; cloth gilt, 6<em>s.</em> 6<em>d.</em></p>
-
-
-<hr class="fulla" />
-<p><b><span class="fs160">Original Lists of Persons of Quality;</span></b>
-Emigrants; Religious Exiles; Political Rebels; Serving Men Sold
-for a Term of Years; Apprentices; Children Stolen; Maidens
-Pressed; and others who went from Great Britain to the American
-Plantations, 1600-1700. With their Ages, the Localities where they
-formerly Lived in the Mother Country, Names of the Ships in
-which they embarked, and other interesting particulars. From
-MSS. preserved in the State Paper Department of Her Majesty's
-Public Record Office, England. Edited by <span class="smcap">John Camden
-Hotten</span>. A very handsome volume, crown 4to, cloth gilt, 700
-pages, 31<em>s.</em> 6<em>d.</em> A few Large Paper copies have been printed,
-price 50<em>s.</em></p>
-
-
-<hr class="fulla" />
-<p><b><span class="fs160">Parochial History of the County of</span>
-Cornwall.</b> Compiled from the best authorities, and corrected and
-improved from actual survey. 4 vols. 4to, cloth extra, £3 3<em>s.</em> the
-set; or, separately, the first three volumes, 16<em>s.</em> each; the fourth
-volume, 18<em>s.</em></p>
-
-
-<hr class="fulla" />
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_32C" id="Page_32C">[32C]</a></span></p>
-
-<p class="pfs90 smcap">Companion to the "Bon Gaultier Ballads."</p>
-
-<p><b><span class="fs160">Puck on Pegasus.</span></b> By <span class="smcap">H. Cholmondeley
-Pennell</span>. In 4to, printed within an India-paper tone, and elegantly
-bound, gilt, gilt edges, price 10<em>s.</em> 6<em>d.</em></p>
-
-<div class="blockquotx">
-
-⁂ <em>This most amusing work has passed through Five Editions, receiving
-everywhere the highest praise as "a clever and brilliant book." In addition
-to the designs of</em> <span class="smcap">George Cruikshank</span>, <span class="smcap">John Leech</span>, <span class="smcap">Julian Portch</span>, "<span class="smcap">Phiz</span>,"
-<em>and other artists</em>, Sir <span class="smcap">Noel Paton</span>, <span class="smcap">Millais</span>, <span class="smcap">John Tenniel</span>, <span class="smcap">Richard
-Doyle</span>, <em>and</em> <span class="smcap">M. Ellen Edwards</span> <em>have now contributed several exquisite
-pictures, thus making the New Edition&mdash;which is Twice the Size of the old one&mdash;the
-best book for the Drawing-room table published</em>.</div>
-
-
-<p class="center lsp">By the same Author.</p>
-
-<p><b><span class="fs160">Modern Babylon</span></b>, and other Poems.
-Small crown 8vo, cloth extra, gilt, 4<em>s.</em> 6<em>d.</em></p>
-
-
-<hr class="fulla" />
-<p class="pfs90 smcap">Companion to "Cussans' Heraldry."</p>
-
-<div class="figleft">
-<img src="images/cat_032a.jpg" width="170" alt="" />
-</div>
-
-<p><b><span class="fs160">The Pursuivant of Arms</span></b>;
-or, Heraldry founded upon Facts. A
-Popular Guide to the Science of Heraldry.
-By <span class="smcap">J. R. Planché</span>, Esq., F.S.A.,
-Somerset Herald. To which are added,
-Essays on the <span class="smcap">Badges of the Houses of
-Lancaster and York</span>. A New Edition,
-enlarged and revised by the Author, illustrated
-with Coloured Frontispiece, five
-full-page Plates, and about 200 Illustrations.
-Crown 8vo. beautifully bound in cloth, with
-Emblematic Design, extra gilt, 7<em>s.</em> 6<em>d.</em></p>
-
-
-<hr class="fulla" />
-<p class="pfs80">PICCADILLY ANNUAL FOR 1874.</p>
-
-<div class="figleft">
-<img src="images/cat_032b.jpg" width="250" alt="" />
-</div>
-
-<p><b><span class="fs160">The Knowing</span>
-Ones at Home.</b> Stories
-of their Doings at a Local
-Science Meeting, at the
-Crystal Palace, at St.
-Paul's, at a Foresters'
-Fête, &amp;c., &amp;c. A New
-and entirely Original Humorous
-Story, crammed
-with Fun from the first
-page to the last. Profusely
-Illustrated by
-<span class="smcap">Brunton</span>, <span class="smcap">Matt Morgan</span>,
-and other Artists.
-4to, handsome wrapper, 1<em>s.</em></p>
-
-
-<hr class="fulla" />
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_33C" id="Page_33C">[33C]</a></span></p>
-
-<p><b><span class="fs160">Policeman Y: His Opinions on War</span>
-and the Millingtary.</b> With Illustrations by the Author, <span class="smcap">John
-Edward Soden</span>. Cloth, very neat, 2<em>s.</em> 6<em>d.</em>; in paper, 1<em>s.</em></p>
-
-
-<hr class="fulla" />
-<p class="pfs90 smcap">For Gold and Silversmiths.</p>
-
-<p><b><span class="fs160">Private Book of Useful Alloys</span> and
-Memoranda for Goldsmiths and Jewellers.</b> By <span class="smcap">James E.
-Collins</span>, C.E., of Birmingham. Royal 16mo, 3<em>s.</em> 6<em>d.</em></p>
-
-<div class="blockquotx">
-
-⁂ <em>The secrets of the Gold and Silversmiths' Art are here given, for the benefit
-of young Apprentices and Practitioners. It is an invaluable book to the Trade.</em></div>
-
-
-<hr class="fulla" />
-<p class="pfs90 smcap">"An Awfully Jolly Book for Parties."</p>
-
-<div class="figleft">
-<img src="images/cat_033.jpg" width="300" alt="" />
-</div>
-
-<p><b><span class="fs160">Puniana:</span></b> Thoughts
-Wise and Otherwise. By the
-Hon. <span class="smcap">Hugh Rowley</span>. Best
-Book of Riddles and Puns
-ever formed. With nearly 100
-exquisitely Fanciful Drawings.
-Contains nearly 3000 of the
-best Riddles, and 10,000 most
-outrageous Puns, and is one of
-the most Popular Books ever
-issued. New Edition, small
-quarto, uniform with the
-"Bab Ballads." Price 6<em>s.</em></p>
-
-<div class="blockquotx">
-
-"Enormous burlesque&mdash;unapproachable
-and pre-eminent. We
-venture to think that this very queer
-volume will be a favourite. It
-deserves to be so; and we should
-suggest that, to a dull person desirous to get credit with the young holiday
-people, it would be good policy to invest in the book, and dole it out by instalments."&mdash;<cite>Saturday
-Review.</cite></div>
-
-<hr class="r30a" />
-<p class="center lsp">By the same Author.</p>
-
-<p><b><span class="fs160">A Second Series of Puniana:</span></b> Containing
-nearly 100 beautifully executed Drawings, and a splendid Collection
-of Riddles and Puns, fully equal to those in the First Volume. Small
-quarto, uniform with the First Series, cloth gilt, gilt edges, 6<em>s.</em></p>
-
-<p class="rightx">[<em>Nearly ready.</em></p>
-
-
-<hr class="fulla" />
-<p><b><span class="fs160">Remarkable Claimants,</span></b> Ancient and Modern. Being the Histories of
-all the most celebrated Pretenders and Claimants during the last 600
-years. Fcap. 8vo, 300 pages, illustrated boards, 2<em>s.</em></p>
-
-
-<hr class="fulla" />
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_34C" id="Page_34C">[34C]</a></span></p>
-
-<p class="pfs80">GUSTAVE DORÉ'S DESIGNS.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<img src="images/cat_034.jpg" width="500" alt="" />
-</div>
-
-<p><b><span class="fs160">The Works of Rabelais.</span></b> Faithfully translated
-from the French, with variorum Notes, and numerous characteristic
-Illustrations by <span class="smcap">Gustave Doré</span>. Crown 8vo, cloth extra,
-700 pages. Price 7<em>s.</em> 6<em>d.</em></p>
-
-
-<hr class="fulla" />
-<p class="pfs90 smcap">Uniform with "Wonderful Characters."</p>
-
-<p><b><span class="fs160">Remarkable Trials and Notorious</span>
-Characters.</b> From "Half-Hanged Smith," 1700, to Oxford, who
-shot at the Queen, 1840. By Captain <span class="smcap">L. Benson.</span> With spirited
-full-page Engravings by <span class="smcap">Phiz</span>. 8vo, 550 pages, 7<em>s.</em> 6<em>d.</em></p>
-
-<div class="blockquotx">
-
-⁂ <em>A Complete Library of Sensation Literature! There are plots enough here
-to produce a hundred "exciting" Novels, and at least five hundred "powerful"
-Magazine Stories. The book will be appreciated by all readers whose taste lies in
-this direction.</em></div>
-
-
-<hr class="fulla" />
-<p><b><span class="fs160">Rochefoucauld's Reflections and</span>
-Moral Maxims.</b> With Introductory Essay by <span class="smcap">Sainte-Beuve</span>, and
-Explanatory Notes. Royal 16mo, elegantly printed, 1<em>s.</em>; cloth
-neat, 1<em>s.</em> 6<em>d.</em></p>
-
-
-<hr class="fulla" />
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_35C" id="Page_35C">[35C]</a></span></p>
-
-<p><b><span class="fs160">Rogues and Vagabonds of the Race-Course.</span></b>
-Full Explanations how they Cheat at Roulette, Three
-Cards, Thimble-rig; with some Account of the Welsher and Money-Lender.
-By <span class="smcap">Alfred Toulmin</span>, late 65th Regt. Fcap. 8vo, illustrated
-cover, 1<em>s.</em></p>
-
-
-<hr class="fulla" />
-<p><b><span class="fs160">Roll of Battle Abbey</span></b>; or, A List of the Principal
-Warriors who came over from Normandy with William the
-Conqueror, and Settled in this Country, <span class="fs70">A.D.</span> 1066-7. Carefully
-drawn, and printed on fine plate paper, nearly three feet by two
-feet, with the Arms of the principal Barons elaborately emblazoned
-in Gold and Colours. Price 5<em>s.</em>; or, handsomely framed in carved
-oak of an antique pattern, 22<em>s.</em> 6<em>d.</em></p>
-
-
-<hr class="fulla" />
-<p><b><span class="fs160">Roll of Caerlaverock</span></b>: the Oldest Heraldic
-Roll; including the Original Anglo-Norman Poem, and an English
-Translation of the MS. in the British Museum. By <span class="smcap">Thomas
-Wright</span>, M.A. The Arms emblazoned in gold and colours. In
-4to, very handsomely printed, extra gold cloth, 12<em>s.</em></p>
-
-
-<hr class="fulla" />
-<p><b><span class="fs160">Roman Catholics in the County</span> of
-York in 1604.</b> Transcribed from the Original MS. in the Bodleian
-Library, and Edited, with Genealogical Notes, by <span class="smcap">Edward Peacock</span>,
-F.S.A., Editor of "Army Lists of the Roundheads and
-Cavaliers, 1642." Small 4to, handsomely printed and bound, 15<em>s.</em></p>
-
-<div class="blockquotx">
-
-⁂ <em>Genealogists and Antiquaries will find much new and curious matter in
-this work. An elaborate Index refers to every name in the volume, among which
-will be found many of the highest local interest.</em></div>
-
-
-<hr class="fulla" />
-<div class="figcenter">
-<img src="images/cat_035.jpg" width="350" alt="" />
-</div>
-
-<p><b><span class="fs160">Ross's (Chas. H.) Unlikely Tales</span> and
-Wrong-Headed Essays.</b> Fcap. 8vo, with numerous quaint and
-amusing Illustrations, 1<em>s.</em></p>
-
-
-<hr class="fulla" />
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_36C" id="Page_36C">[36C]</a></span></p>
-
-<p><b><span class="fs160">Ross's (Chas. H.) Story of a Honeymoon.</span></b>
-A New Edition of this charmingly humorous book. Fcap. 8vo, illustrated
-boards, 2<em>s.</em></p>
-
-<p class="rightx">[<em>Nearly ready.</em></p>
-
-
-<hr class="fulla" />
-<p><b><span class="fs160">School Life at Winchester College</span></b>;
-or, The Reminiscences of a Winchester Junior. By the Author of
-"The Log of the Water Lily;" and "The Water Lily on the
-Danube." Second Edition, Revised. <span class="smcap">Coloured Plates</span>. 7<em>s.</em> 6<em>d.</em></p>
-
-
-<hr class="fulla" />
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 300px;">
-<img src="images/cat_036.jpg" width="300" height="246" alt="" />
-</div>
-
-<p><b><span class="fs160">The Secret Out</span></b>; or, One Thousand
-Tricks with Cards, and other Recreations; with Entertaining Experiments
-in Drawing Room or "White Magic." By the Author
-of the "Magician's Own Book." Edited by <span class="smcap">W. H. Cremer</span>, Jun.,
-of Regent Street. With 300 Engravings. Crown 8vo, cloth, 4<em>s.</em> 6<em>d.</em></p>
-
-<div class="blockquotx">
-
-⁂ <em>Under the title of "<span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Le Magicien des Salons</span>," this book has long been a Standard
-Magic Book with all French and German Professors of the Art. The tricks are
-described so carefully, with engravings to illustrate them, that not the slightest
-difficulty can be experienced in performing them.</em></div>
-
-
-<hr class="fulla" />
-<p><b><span class="fs160">Shaving Them</span></b>; or, The Adventures of
-Three Yankees. By <span class="smcap">Titus A. Brick</span>. Fcap. 8vo, illustrated cover, 1<em>s.</em></p>
-
-
-<hr class="fulla" />
-<p><b><span class="fs160">Shelley's Early Life.</span></b> From Original
-Sources. With Curious Incidents, Letters, and Writings, now
-First Published or Collected. By <span class="smcap">Denis Florence Mac-Carthy</span>.
-Cheaper Edition, crown 8vo, with Illustrations, 440 pages, 7<em>s.</em> 6<em>d.</em></p>
-
-<div class="blockquotx">
-
-⁂ <em>A most interesting volume of new biographical facts. The work possesses
-special interest to Irish readers, as the poet's political pamphlets, advocating
-Home Rule and other rights, are here for the first time given in a
-collected form. These pamphlets Shelley and his wife threw from the balcony
-of a window in Sackville Street, as the best means of publishing the poet's
-political principles.</em></div>
-
-
-<hr class="fulla" />
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_37C" id="Page_37C">[37C]</a></span></p>
-
-<p class="pfs80">THE POCKET SHELLEY.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<img src="images/cat_037.jpg" width="250" alt="" />
-</div>
-
-<p class="pfs80 smcap">Shelley, from the Godwin Sketch.</p>
-
-<p><b><span class="fs160">Shelley's Poetical Works.</span></b> Now First
-Reprinted from the Author's Original Editions. In Two Series, the
-<span class="smcap">First</span> containing "Queen Mab" and the Early Poems; the <span class="smcap">Second</span>,
-"Laon and Cythna," "The Cenci," and Later Poems. In royal
-16mo, over 400 pages in a volume, price 1<em>s.</em> 8<em>d.</em> each, in illustrated cover;
-2<em>s.</em> 2<em>d.</em> each in cloth extra.</p>
-
-<p class="center"><em>The Third Series, completing the Work, will shortly be ready.</em></p>
-
-
-<hr class="fulla" />
-<p><b><span class="fs160">Sheridan's (Richard Brinsley) Complete</span>
-Works</b>, with Life and Anecdotes. Including his Dramatic
-Writings, printed from the Original Editions, his works in Prose
-and Poetry, Translations, Speeches, Jokes, Puns, &amp;c.; with a Collection
-of Sheridaniana. Crown 8vo, cloth gilt, with Portrait and
-Illustrations, 7<em>s.</em> 6<em>d.</em></p>
-
-<p class="rightx">[<em>Preparing.</em></p>
-
-
-<hr class="fulla" />
-<p><b><span class="fs160">Shirley Brooks' Amusing Poetry.</span></b> A
-Collection of Humorous Poems. Selected by <span class="smcap">Shirley Brooks</span>,
-Editor of <cite>Punch</cite>. Fcap. 8vo, paper boards, 2<em>s.</em></p>
-
-<p class="rightx">[<em>Preparing.</em></p>
-
-<div class="blockquotx">
-
-⁂ <em>This work has for many years been out of print, and very scarce.</em></div>
-
-
-<hr class="fulla" />
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_38C" id="Page_38C">[38C]</a></span></p>
-
-<p><b><span class="fs160">Signboards</span></b>: Their History. With Anecdotes
-of Famous Taverns and Remarkable Characters. By <span class="smcap">Jacob
-Larwood</span> and <span class="smcap">John Camden Hotten</span>. <span class="smcap">Seventh Edition.</span>
-Crown 8vo, cloth extra, 580 pp., 7<em>s.</em> 6<em>d.</em></p>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<img src="images/cat_038a.jpg" width="250" alt="" />
-</div>
-
-<p class="pfs90 smcap">Bull and Mouth.</p>
-
-<div class="blockquotx">
-
-"It is not fair on the part of a reviewer to pick out the plums of an author's book,
-thus filching away his cream, and leaving little but skim-milk remaining; but, even if we
-were ever so maliciously inclined, we could not in the present instance pick out all
-Messrs. Larwood and Hotten's plums, because the good things are so numerous as
-to defy the most <ins class="corr" title="Transcriber's Note&mdash;Original text: 'wholesale de redation'">wholesale depredation</ins>."&mdash;<cite>The Times.</cite></div>
-
-<div class="blockquotx">
-
-⁂ <em>Nearly 100 most curious illustrations on wood are given, showing the various
-old signs which were formerly hung from taverns and other houses.</em></div>
-
-
-<hr class="fulla" />
-<p class="pfs90">CHARLES DICKENS' EARLY SKETCHES.</p>
-
-<p><b><span class="fs160">Sketches of Young Couples</span></b>, Young
-Ladies and Young Gentlemen. By "<span class="smcap">Quiz</span>" (<span class="smcap">Charles Dickens</span>).
-With 18 Steel-plate Illustrations by "<span class="smcap">Phiz</span>" (<span class="smcap">H. K. Browne</span>).
-A New Edition, crown 8vo, cloth gilt, 4<em>s.</em> 6<em>d.</em></p>
-
-<p class="rightx">[<em>Preparing.</em></p>
-
-
-<hr class="fulla" />
-<div class="figleft">
-<img src="images/cat_038b.jpg" width="170" alt="" />
-</div>
-
-<p><b><span class="fs160">The Slang Dictionary</span></b>:
-Etymological, Historical, and Anecdotal.
-An <span class="smcap">Entirely New Edition</span>, revised
-throughout, and considerably Enlarged,
-containing upwards of a thousand more
-words than the last edition. Crown 8vo,
-with Curious Illustrations, cloth extra,
-6<em>s.</em> 6<em>d.</em></p>
-
-<div class="blockquotx">
-
-"Valuable as a work of reference."&mdash;<cite>Saturday
-Review.</cite></div>
-
-
-<hr class="fulla" />
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_39C" id="Page_39C">[39C]</a></span></p>
-
-<p class="pfs80">A KEEPSAKE FOR SMOKERS.</p>
-
-<p><b><span class="fs160">The Smoker's Text-Book.</span></b> By <span class="smcap">J. Hamer</span>,
-F.R.S.L. Exquisitely printed from "silver-faced" type, cloth, very
-neat, gilt edges, 2<em>s.</em> 6<em>d.</em>, post free.</p>
-
-<div class="blockquotx">
-
-"A pipe is a great comforter, a pleasant soother. The man who
-smokes, thinks like a sage, and acts like a Samaritan."&mdash;<em>Bulwer.</em><br />
-
-&nbsp;&nbsp; "A tiny volume, dedicated to the votaries of the weed;
-beautifully printed on toned paper, in, we believe, the smallest
-type ever made (cast especially for show at the Great Exhibition
-in Hyde Park), but very clear, notwithstanding its minuteness....
-The pages sing, in various styles, the praises of tobacco.
-Amongst the writers laid under contribution are Bulwer, Kingsley,
-Charles Lamb, Thackeray, Cowper, and Byron."&mdash;<em>The Field.</em></div>
-
-
-<hr class="fulla" />
-<p class="pfs80">WEST-END LIFE AND DOINGS.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<img src="images/cat_039.jpg" width="250" alt="" />
-</div>
-
-<p><b><span class="fs160">The Story of the London Parks.</span></b> By
-<span class="smcap">Jacob Larwood</span>. With numerous Illustrations, Coloured and
-Plain. In One thick Volume, crown 8vo, cloth extra, gilt, 7<em>s.</em> 6<em>d.</em></p>
-
-<div class="blockquotx">
-
-⁂ <em>A most interesting work, giving a complete History of these favourite out-of-door
-resorts, from the earliest period to the present time, together with the fashions,
-the promenades, the rides, the reviews, and other displays.</em></div>
-
-
-<hr class="fulla" />
-<p><b><span class="fs160">Summer Cruising in the South Seas.</span></b>
-By <span class="smcap">C. W. Stoddard</span>. With about Thirty Engravings
-on Wood, drawn by <span class="smcap">Wallis Mackay</span>. Crown 8vo, cloth,
-extra gilt, 5<em>s.</em></p>
-
-<div class="blockquotx">
-
-⁂ <em>Chapters descriptive of life and adventure in the South Sea Islands, in the
-style made so popular by "The Earl and the Doctor."</em></div>
-
-
-<hr class="fulla" />
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_40C" id="Page_40C">[40C]</a></span></p>
-
-<p class="pfs80">ALGERNON CHARLES SWINBURNE'S WORKS.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<img src="images/cat_040.jpg" width="250" alt="" />
-</div>
-
-<p><b><span class="fs160">Swinburne's William Blake</span></b>: A Critical
-Essay. With facsimile Paintings, Coloured by Hand, after the
-Drawings by Blake and his Wife. Thick 8vo, cloth extra, price 16<em>s.</em></p>
-
-
-<hr class="r30a" />
-<p><b><span class="fs160">Swinburne's Atalanta in Calydon.</span></b>
-New Edition. Foolscap 8vo, price 6<em>s.</em></p>
-
-
-<hr class="r30a" />
-<p><b><span class="fs160">Swinburne's Bothwell.</span></b> A New Poem.</p>
-
-<p class="rightx">[<em>In preparation.</em></p>
-
-
-<hr class="r30a" />
-<p><b><span class="fs160">Swinburne's Chastelard.</span></b> A Tragedy.
-New Edition. Price 7<em>s.</em></p>
-
-
-<hr class="r30a" />
-<p><b><span class="fs160">Swinburne's Poems and Ballads.</span></b>
-New Edition. Price 9<em>s.</em></p>
-
-
-<hr class="r30a" />
-<p><b><span class="fs160">Swinburne's Notes on his Poems</span></b>,
-and on the Reviews which have appeared upon them. Price 1<em>s.</em></p>
-
-
-<hr class="r30a" />
-<p><b><span class="fs160">Swinburne's Queen Mother and Rosamond.</span></b>
-New Edition. Foolscap 8vo, price 5<em>s.</em></p>
-
-
-<hr class="r30a" />
-<p><b><span class="fs160">Swinburne's Song of Italy.</span></b> Foolscap
-8vo, toned paper, cloth, price 3<em>s.</em> 6<em>d.</em></p>
-
-
-<hr class="fulla" />
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_41C" id="Page_41C">[41C]</a></span></p>
-
-<p class="pfs80">WILLIAM COMBE'S BEST WORK.</p>
-
-<p><b><span class="fs160">Dr. Syntax's Three Tours.</span></b> <span class="smcap">With the
-whole of Rowlandson's very droll full-page Illustrations,
-in Colours, after the Original Drawings.</span> Comprising
-the well-known <span class="smcap">Tours</span>&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="pad6">
-1. <span class="smcap">In Search of the Picturesque.</span><br />
-2. <span class="smcap">In Search of Consolation.</span><br />
-3. <span class="smcap">In Search of a Wife.</span><br />
-</div>
-
-<div class="in1">The Three Series Complete and Unabridged, with a Life of the
-Author by <span class="smcap">John Camden Hotten</span>. 8vo, cloth extra, gilt, in one
-handsome volume, price 7<em>s.</em> 6<em>d.</em></div>
-
-<div class="blockquotx pad2">
-
-⁂ <em>One of the most amusing and laughable books ever published.</em></div>
-
-<div class="in1">A <span class="smcap">Smaller Edition</span>, with Eight Coloured Plates, the text complete,
-price 3<em>s.</em> 6<em>d.</em></div>
-
-
-<hr class="fulla" />
-<div class="figcenter">
-<img src="images/cat_041.jpg" width="450" alt="" />
-</div>
-
-<p class="pfs90 smcap">Theodore Hook's House, near Putney.</p>
-
-<p><b><span class="fs160">Theodore Hook's Ramsbottom</span>
-Papers.</b> The whole 29 Letters, complete and unabridged,
-precisely as they left the pen of their genial and witty Author. Fcap.
-8vo, illustrated cover, 1<em>s.</em></p>
-
-
-<hr class="fulla" />
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_42C" id="Page_42C">[42C]</a></span></p>
-
-<p><b><span class="fs160">Taylor's History of Playing Cards.</span></b>
-With Sixty curious Illustrations, 550 pp., price 7<em>s.</em> 6<em>d.</em></p>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<img src="images/cat_042a.jpg" width="250" alt="" />
-</div>
-
-<div class="blockquotx">
-
-⁂ <em>Ancient and Modern Games, Conjuring, Fortune-Telling, and Card Sharping,
-Gambling and Calculation, Cartomancy, Old Gaming-Houses, Card Revels
-and Blind Hookey, Picquet and Vingt-et-un, Whist and Cribbage, Tricks, &amp;c.</em></div>
-
-
-<hr class="fulla" />
-<div class="figleft">
-<img src="images/cat_042b.jpg" width="200" alt="" />
-</div>
-
-<p><b><span class="fs160">Thackerayana.</span></b> Notes
-and Anecdotes illustrative of Scenes
-and Characters in the Works of <span class="smcap">William
-Makepeace Thackeray</span>. With
-nearly Four Hundred Illustrations,
-coloured and plain. In 8vo, uniform
-with the Library Edition of his works,
-7<em>s.</em> 6<em>d.</em></p>
-
-<p class="rightx">[<em>Preparing.</em></p>
-
-<p class="pfs70">&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;</p>
-
-<p><b><span class="fs160">Theodore Hook's</span>
-Choice Humorous Works</b>, with his
-Ludicrous Adventures, Bons-mots, Puns,
-and Hoaxes. With a new Life of the
-Author. <span class="smcap">Portraits</span>, <span class="smcap">Facsimiles</span>, and
-<span class="smcap">Illustrations</span>. Cr. 8vo, 600 pages,
-cloth extra, 7<em>s.</em> 6<em>d.</em></p>
-
-<div class="blockquotx">
-
-⁂ "As a wit and humorist of the highest order
-his name will be preserved. His political songs
-and <i lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">jeux d'esprit</i>, when the hour comes for collecting
-them, <em>will form a volume of sterling and
-lasting attraction</em>!"&mdash;<span class="smcap">J. G. Lockhart.</span></div>
-
-
-<hr class="fulla" />
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_43C" id="Page_43C">[43C]</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<img src="images/cat_043.jpg" width="450" alt="" />
-</div>
-
-<p class="pfs90 smcap">The Subscription Room at Brookes's.</p>
-
-<p><b><span class="fs160">Timbs' Clubs and Club Life in London.</span></b>
-With <span class="smcap">Anecdotes</span> of its <span class="smcap">Famous Coffee Houses</span>, <span class="smcap">Hostelries</span>,
-and <span class="smcap">Taverns</span>. By <span class="smcap">John Timbs</span>, F.S.A. New Edition,
-with <span class="smcap">Numerous Illustrations</span>, drawn expressly. Crown 8vo,
-cloth extra, 600 pages, 7<em>s.</em> 6<em>d.</em></p>
-
-<div class="blockquotx">
-
-⁂ <em>A Companion to "The History of Sign-Boards." It abounds in quaint
-stories of old London Clubs&mdash;the</em> Blue Stocking, Kit Kat, Beef Steak, Robin Hood,
-Mohocks, Scriblerus, One o'Clock, the Civil, <em>and hundreds of others; together
-with</em> Tom's, Dick's, Button's, Ned's, Will's, <em>and the famous Coffee Houses of the
-last century. A full account of the great modern clubs of Pall Mall and St. James's
-is also given. The <ins class="corr" title="Transcriber's Note&mdash;Original text: 'booh is a mine'">book is a mine</ins> of anecdote.</em></div>
-
-
-<hr class="fulla" />
-<p><b><span class="fs160">Timbs' English Eccentrics and Eccentricities.</span></b>
-Stories of Wealth and Fashion, Delusions, Impostures
-and Fanatic Missions, Strange Sights and Sporting Scenes,
-Eccentric Artists, Theatrical Folks, Men of Letters, &amp;c. By <span class="smcap">John
-Timbs</span>, F.S.A. An entirely New Edition, with numerous Illustrations.
-Crown 8vo, cloth extra, 600 pages, 7<em>s.</em> 6<em>d.</em></p>
-
-<p class="rightx">[<em>Preparing.</em></p>
-
-
-<hr class="fulla" />
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_44C" id="Page_44C">[44C]</a></span></p>
-
-<p class="pfs90 smcap">Uniform with "The Turf, Chase, and Road."</p>
-
-<p><b><span class="fs160">"Tom Smith."</span></b> Reminiscences of the late
-<span class="smcap">Thomas Assheton Smith</span>, Esq.; or, The Pursuits of an English
-Country Gentleman. By Sir <span class="smcap">J. E. Eardley Wilmot</span>, Bart. A
-New and Revised Edition, with steel-plate Portrait, and plain and
-coloured Illustrations. Crown 8vo, cloth extra, 7<em>s.</em> 6<em>d.</em></p>
-
-
-<hr class="fulla" />
-<p><b><span class="fs160">Vers de Société.</span></b> An entirely New Selection,
-fuller and better than any hitherto made; introducing all the
-Old Favourites, and many new ones. Edited by <span class="smcap">H. Cholmondeley
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-
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-Now first published in an English Translation, complete and
-unabridged. Post 8vo, illustrated boards, 2<em>s.</em></p>
-
-<p class="rightx">[<em>Nearly ready.</em></p>
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-<p><b><span class="fs160">Vyner's Notitia Venatica</span></b>: A Treatise
-on Fox-Hunting, the General Management of Hounds, and the
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-Sixth Edition, Enlarged. By <span class="smcap">Robert C. Vyner</span>, Esq., of Eathorpe
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-He is really a fine fellow."&mdash;<cite>Chambers's Journal.</cite></div>
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-exact Facsimile of this important Document, with the Fifty-nine
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-
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-</div>
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-Anecdotes of Remarkable and Eccentric Persons of Every Age and
-Nation. From the text of <span class="smcap">Henry Wilson</span> and <span class="smcap">James Caulfield</span>.
-Crown 8vo, cloth extra, with Sixty-one full-page Engravings of
-Extraordinary Persons, 7<em>s.</em> 6<em>d.</em></p>
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-who takes it up will not readily lay it down until he has read it through.
-The Introduction is almost entirely devoted to a consideration of Pig-Faced
-Ladies, and the various stories concerning them.</em></div>
-
-
-<hr class="fulla" />
-<p><b><span class="fs160">Wright's (Andrew) Court-Hand Restored</span></b>;
-or, Student's Assistant in Reading Old Deeds, Charters,
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-
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-the Grotesque</b> in Art, in Literature, Sculpture, and Painting, from
-the Earliest Times to the Present Day. By <span class="smcap">Thomas Wright</span>, Esq.,
-F.S.A. Profusely illustrated by <span class="smcap">Fairholt</span>. Small 4to, cloth
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-
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-<img src="images/cat_046.jpg" width="450" height="250" alt="" />
-</div>
-
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-Georges</b> (House of Hanover). A very Entertaining Book of 640
-pages, with 400 Pictures, Caricatures, Squibs, Broadsides, Window
-Pictures, &amp;c. By <span class="smcap">Thomas Wright</span>, Esq., F.S.A. Crown 8vo,
-cloth extra, 7<em>s.</em> 6<em>d.</em> A few copies of a Large Paper Edition are still
-on sale, with extra Portraits, bound in half-morocco, 30<em>s.</em></p>
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-could emulate. Macaulay's most brilliant sentence is weak by the side of the little
-woodcut from Gillray, which gives us Burke and Fox."&mdash;<cite>Saturday Review.</cite></div>
-
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-<hr class="fulla" />
-<p class="pfs80">ALL THE BEST AMERICAN HUMOUR.</p>
-
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-Augustus Sala</span>. Containing <span class="smcap">Artemus Ward, His Book</span>; <span class="smcap">Biglow
-Papers</span>; <span class="smcap">Orpheus C. Kerr</span>; <span class="smcap">Major Jack Downing</span>; and <span class="smcap">Nasby
-Papers</span>. 700 pages, cloth, 3<em>s.</em> 6<em>d.</em></p>
-
-<hr class="r30a" />
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-Series of the best American Humorists. Containing <span class="smcap">Artemus
-Ward's Travels</span>; <span class="smcap">Hans Breitmann</span>; <span class="smcap">The Professor at the
-Breakfast Table</span>; <span class="smcap">Biglow Papers</span>, Part II.; and <span class="smcap">Josh Billings</span>;
-with an Introduction by <span class="smcap">George Augustus Sala</span>. 700
-pages, cloth, 3<em>s.</em> 6<em>d.</em></p>
-
-<hr class="r30a" />
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-Containing <span class="smcap">Artemus Ward's Fenians</span>; <span class="smcap">The Autocrat of the
-Breakfast Table</span>; <span class="smcap">Bret Harte's Stories</span>; <span class="smcap">The Innocents
-Abroad</span>; and <span class="smcap">New Pilgrim's Progress</span>; with an Introduction by
-<span class="smcap">George Augustus Sala</span>. 700 pages, cloth, 3<em>s.</em> 6<em>d.</em></p>
-
-
-<hr class="fulla" />
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_47C" id="Page_47C">[47C]</a></span></p>
-
-<p class="p1 pfs135 antiqua">Popular Shilling Books, mostly Humorous,</p>
-
-<p class="pfs90 lsp">In Illustrated Covers.</p>
-
-<p class="pfs80">(See also under alphabetical arrangement.)</p>
-
-<p><br />
-<span class="smcap">American Happy Thoughts.</span><br />
-<span class="smcap">Artemus Ward: Among the Mormons.</span><br />
-<span class="smcap">&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash; His Book.</span><br />
-<span class="smcap">&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash; Letters to Punch.</span><br />
-<span class="smcap">Awful Crammers.</span> By Titus A. Brick.<br />
-<span class="smcap">Babies and Ladders.</span> By Emmanuel Kink.<br />
-<span class="smcap">Biglow Papers.</span><br />
-<span class="smcap">Bret Harte's East and West.</span><br />
-<span class="smcap">&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash; Luck of Roaring Camp.</span><br />
-<span class="smcap">&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash; Stories of the Sierras.</span><br />
-<span class="smcap">Bright's Speeches</span>, cloth.<br />
-<span class="smcap">Brown</span> (Mr.) <span class="smcap">on the Goings on of Mrs. Brown.</span><br />
-<span class="smcap">Byron in Love.</span> By Howard Paul.<br />
-<span class="smcap">Carlyle (Thomas) on the Choice of Books.</span><br />
-<span class="smcap">Chips from a Rough Log.</span><br />
-<span class="smcap">Danbury Newsman.</span> By J. M. Bailey.<br />
-<span class="smcap">Derby Day</span>: a Sporting Novel.<br />
-<span class="smcap">Dod Grile's Fiend's Delight.</span><br />
-<span class="smcap">&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash; Nuggets and Dust.</span><br />
-<span class="smcap">Du Chaillu's Country of the Dwarfs.</span><br />
-<span class="smcap">Fun for the Million.</span> By the best Humorists of the Day.<br />
-<span class="smcap">Hans Breitmann's Ballads.</span><br />
-<span class="smcap">Hatton's Kites and Pigeons.</span> Illustrated.<br />
-<span class="smcap">Holmes' Autocrat of the Breakfast Table.</span><br />
-<span class="smcap">&mdash;&mdash; Poet at the Breakfast Table.</span><br />
-<span class="smcap">&mdash;&mdash; Professor at the Breakfast Table.</span><br />
-<span class="smcap">&mdash;&mdash; Wit and Humour.</span><br />
-<span class="smcap">Hood's Whims and Oddities.</span> Both Series, complete.<br />
-<span class="smcap">Josh Billings: his Book of Sayings.</span><br />
-<span class="smcap">Lamb's Essays of Elia.</span> Both Series, complete.<br />
-<span class="smcap">Mr. Sprouts: His Opinions.</span><br />
-<span class="smcap">Mark Twain's Innocents Abroad.</span><br />
-<span class="smcap">&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash; Jumping Frog.</span><br />
-<span class="smcap">&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash; New Pilgrim's Progress.</span><br />
-<span class="smcap">&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash; Practical Jokes.</span><br />
-<span class="smcap">&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash; Screamers.</span><br />
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_48C" id="Page_48C">[48C]</a></span>
-<span class="smcap">Mystery of Mr. E. Drood.</span> By O. C. Kerr.<br />
-<span class="smcap">Never Caught.</span> The Blockade-runner's Story.<br />
-<span class="smcap">Orpheus C. Kerr Papers.</span><br />
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-<span class="smcap">Policeman Y: Ballads.</span> Illustrated.<br />
-<span class="smcap">Rochefoucauld's Maxims</span>, with Sainte-Beuve's Essay.<br />
-<span class="smcap">Rogues and Vagabonds of the Racecourse.</span><br />
-<span class="smcap">Ross's Unlikely Tales and Wrong-headed Essays.</span><br />
-<span class="smcap">Shaving Them.</span> By Titus A. Brick.<br />
-<span class="smcap">Theodore Hook's Ramsbottom Papers.</span><br />
-</p>
-
-
-<hr class="fulla" />
-<p class="pfs135 antiqua">The Golden Library of the Best Authors.</p>
-
-<hr class="r30a" />
-
-<p class="fs80">⁂ <em>A charming collection of Favourite Works, elegantly printed in Handy
-Volumes, uniform with the Tauchnitz Series.</em></p>
-
-<p class="pfs80">(See also under alphabetical arrangement.)</p>
-
-<hr class="r30a" />
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Bayard Taylor.&mdash;Diversions of the Echo Club.</span> 1<em>s.</em> 6<em>d.</em>;
-cloth, 2<em>s.</em></p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Carlyle.&mdash;On the Choice of Books.</span> 1<em>s.</em>; cloth, 1<em>s.</em> 6<em>d.</em></p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Charles Lamb.&mdash;The Essays of Elia.</span> Complete. Both
-Series. 1<em>s.</em>; cloth, 1<em>s.</em> 6<em>d.</em></p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Holmes.&mdash;Autocrat of the Breakfast Table.</span> 1<em>s.</em>; cloth,
-1<em>s.</em> 6<em>d.</em></p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">&mdash;&mdash;&mdash; Professor at the Breakfast Table.</span> 1<em>s.</em>;
-cloth, 1<em>s.</em> 6<em>d.</em></p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Hood.&mdash;Whims and Oddities.</span> 80 Illustrations. Two Series,
-complete. 1<em>s.</em>; cloth, 1<em>s.</em> 6<em>d.</em></p>
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-cloth, 1<em>s.</em> 6<em>d.</em></p>
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-With Essay by <span class="smcap">Sainte-Beuve</span>. 1<em>s.</em>; cloth, 1<em>s.</em> 6<em>d.</em></p>
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-Series, <span class="smcap">Laon and Cythna</span>, the <span class="smcap">Cenci</span>, and <span class="smcap">Later Poems</span>. Each
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-
-<div class="transnote pg-brk">
-<a name="TN" id="TN"></a>
-<p><strong>TRANSCRIBER'S NOTE</strong></p>
-
-<p>Obvious typographical errors and punctuation errors have been
-corrected after careful comparison with other occurrences within
-the text and consultation of external sources.</p>
-
-<p>Footnotes have been moved to the end of the book text, and before
-the publisher's Book Catalog. Some Footnotes are very long.</p>
-
-<p class="screenonly">To avoid duplication, the page numbering in the publisher's Book
-Catalog at the back of the book has a suffix C added, so that for
-example page [23] in the Catalog is denoted as [23C].</p>
-
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-
-<p>Footnotes <a href="#Footnote_155_155">[155]</a>, <a href="#Footnote_187_187">[187]</a>,
- <a href="#Footnote_188_188">[188]</a>, <a href="#Footnote_190_190">[190]</a>,
- <a href="#Footnote_209_209">[209]</a> and <a href="#Footnote_230_230">[230]</a> are referenced
-from the prior Footnotes and not from the text itself.</p>
-
-<p>For consistency and to follow the intent of the publisher, the Plate
-illustrations have been moved to the beginning of the section
-describing them. In most cases this was only one or two paragraphs
-earlier than the original book layout.</p>
-
-<p>Except for those changes noted below, all misspellings in the text,
-and inconsistent or archaic usage, have been retained. For example,
-after-thought, afterthought; sign-post, signpost; independency; caldron;
-embosomed; dulness.</p>
-
-<p>
-In the illustration captions for the six "Marriage à la mode" Plates,
- 'MARRIAGE A-LA-MODE' has been replaced by 'MARRIAGE A LA MODE'.<br />
-Pg 87 Footnote <a href="#Footnote_57_57">[57]</a>, 'sooner than hey' replaced by 'sooner than they'.<br />
-Pg 88 Footnote <a href="#Footnote_58_58">[58]</a>, 'being desious' replaced by 'being desirous'.<br />
-<a href="#Page_123">Pg 123</a>, 'handsome ackowledgment' replaced by 'handsome acknowledgment'.<br />
-<a href="#Page_130">Pg 130</a>, 'luscious cates' replaced by 'luscious cakes'.<br />
-<a href="#Page_240">Pg 240</a>, 'published in Septemper' replaced by 'published in September'.<br />
-Pg 255 Footnote <a href="#Footnote_179_179">[179]</a>, 'had his deserts' replaced by 'had his desserts'.<br />
-<a href="#Page_262">Pg 262</a>, 'sinster side is Doctor' replaced by 'sinister side is Doctor'.<br />
-<a href="#Page_268">Pg 268</a>, 'as a subscripton-ticket' replaced by 'as a subscription-ticket'.<br />
-<a href="#Page_280">Pg 280</a>, 'to be permament' replaced by 'to be permanent'.<br />
-<a href="#Page_284">Pg 284</a>, 'similiar spirit' replaced by 'similar spirit'.<br />
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-<br />
-Catalog of Books:<br />
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-</p>
-</div>
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-<pre>
-
-
-
-
-
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