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- Suppressed Plates, Wood Engravings, &amp;c., Together with other
- Curiosities germane thereto, being an Account of Certain Matters
- Peculiarly Alluring to the Collector; by George Somes Layard; A
- Project Gutenberg eBook.
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-<pre>
-
-The Project Gutenberg EBook of Suppressed Plates, Wood-engravings, &c., by
-George Somes Layard
-
-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: Suppressed Plates, Wood-engravings, &c.
- Together with other Curiosities Germane Thereto
-
-Author: George Somes Layard
-
-Release Date: October 8, 2017 [EBook #55710]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: UTF-8
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK SUPPRESSED PLATES, WOOD-ENGRAVINGS ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by Chris Curnow, RichardW, 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="dctr02">
-<img id="coverpage"
- src="images/cover.jpg" width="600" height="800" alt="" />
-</div>
-
-<h1 class="h1herein">SUPPRESSED PLATES</h1>
-
-<div class="dfront">
-<div class="fsz7">AGENTS</div>
-<div class="nowrap">
-<table class="fsz8" summary="">
-<tr>
- <td class="tdleft"><span class="smcap">A<b>MERICA</b></span></td>
- <td class="tdleft"><p class="pfirst"><span class="smcap">T<b>HE</b></span>
- <span class="smcap">M<b>ACMILLAN</b></span>
- <span class="smcap">C<b>OMPANY</b></span></p>
- <p class="pfirst">64
- &amp; 66 <span class="smcap">F<b>IFTH</b></span>
- <span class="smcap">A<b>VENUE,</b></span>
- <span class="smcap">N<b>EW</b></span> <span
- class="smcap">Y<b>ORK</b></span></p></td></tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdleft"><span class="smcap">C<b>ANADA</b></span></td>
- <td class="tdleft"><p class="pfirst"><span class="smcap">T<b>HE</b></span>
- <span class="smcap">M<b>ACMILLAN</b></span>
- <span class="smcap">C<b>OMPANY</b></span> <span
- class="smmaj">OF</span> <span class="smcap">C<b>ANADA,</b></span>
- <span class="smcap">L<b>TD.</b></span></p>
- <p class="pfirst">27
- <span class="smcap">R<b>ICHMOND</b></span>
- <span class="smcap">S<b>TREET</b></span>
- <span class="smcap">W<b>EST,</b></span> <span
- class="smcap">T<b>ORONTO</b></span></p></td></tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdleft"><span class="smcap">I<b>NDIA</b></span></td>
- <td class="tdleft"><p class="pfirst">
- <span class="smcap">M<b>ACMILLAN</b></span>
- &amp; <span class="smcap">C<b>OMPANY,</b></span>
- <span class="smcap">L<b>TD.</b></span></p>
- <p class="pfirst"><span
- class="smcap">M<b>ACMILLAN</b></span> <span
- class="smcap">B<b>UILDING,</b></span> <span
- class="smcap">B<b>OMBAY</b></span></p>
- <p class="pfirst">309
- <span class="smcap">B<b>OW</b></span> <span
- class="smcap">B<b>AZAAR</b></span> <span
- class="smcap">S<b>TREET,</b></span> <span
- class="smcap">C<b>ALCUTTA</b></span></p></td></tr>
-</table>
-</div></div>
-
-<div class="dfront">
-<div class="dctr03" id="f1.1">
-<img src="images/i000.02.jpg" width="483" height="700" alt="" />
-<div class="dcaption">The title-page of
-the unwritten “Death in London”</div></div></div>
-
-<div class="dfront">
-<div class="fsz1">SUPPRESSED PLATES</div>
-<div class="fsz3">WOOD ENGRAVINGS, &amp;c.</div>
-<div class="fsz5 padtopc">TOGETHER WITH
- OTHER CURIOSITIES GERMANE THERETO</div>
-
-<div class="fsz7 padtopa">BEING</div>
-<div class="fsz6">AN ACCOUNT OF CERTAIN MATTERS</div>
-<div class="fsz6">PECULIARLY ALLURING TO</div>
-<div class="fsz6">THE COLLECTOR</div>
-
-<div class="fsz7 padtopa">BY</div>
-<div class="fsz4">GEORGE SOMES LAYARD</div>
-
-<div class="dctr11">
-<img src="images/i000.03.png" width="219" height="220" alt="" />
-</div>
-
-<div class="fsz5">LONDON</div>
-<div class="fsz4">ADAM AND CHARLES BLACK</div>
-<div class="fsz5">1907</div>
-</div><!--dfront-->
-
-<div class="dfront">
-<div class="fsz9"><i>Published November 1907</i></div></div>
-
-<div class="dfront">
-<div class="fsz6">I DEDICATE THIS BOOK</div>
-<div class="fsz9">TO</div>
-<div class="fsz8">MY TWO BOYS</div>
-<div class="fsz5">JOHN <span class="smmaj">AND</span> PETER</div>
-<div class="fsz8">WHO</div>
-<div class="fsz8">I SINCERELY HOPE, WILL NOT HAVE SO MANY</div>
-<div class="fsz8"><i>USELESS</i> HOBBIES</div>
-<div class="fsz9">AS</div>
-<div class="fsz8">THEIR AFFECTIONATE</div>
-<div class="fsz5">FATHER</div>
-</div>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<ul><li><h2 class="h2herein">CONTENTS</h2>
-
-<ul>
-<li class="lihanga">&#x2007;1. <span class="smcap">I<b>NTRODUCTORY</b></span>
-…&#xa0;<a href="#p001" title="go to page 1">1</a></li>
-
-<li class="lihanga">&#x2007;2. “<span class="smcap">T<b>HE</b></span> <span
-class="smcap">M<b>ARQUIS</b></span> <span class="smmaj">OF</span> <span
-class="smcap">S<b>TEYNE”</b></span>
-…&#xa0;<a href="#p007" title="go to page 7">7</a></li>
-
-<li class="lihanga">&#x2007;3. <span class="smcap">T<b>HE</b></span> <span
-class="smcap">S<b>UPPRESSED</b></span> <span
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-<span class="smcap">D<b>ICKENS,</b></span>
-<span class="smcap">“P<b>ICKWICK,”</b></span>
-<span class="smcap">“T<b>HE</b></span> <span
-class="smcap">B<b>ATTLE</b></span> <span class="smmaj">OF</span> <span
-class="smcap">L<b>IFE,”</b></span> <span class="smmaj">AND</span> <span
-class="smcap">“G<b>RIMALDI”</b></span>
-…&#xa0;<a href="#p026" title="go to page 26">26</a></li>
-
-<li class="lihanga">&#x2007;4. <span class="smcap">D<b>ICKENS</b></span>
-<span class="smcap">C<b>ANCELLED</b></span>
-<span class="smcap">P<b>LATES:</b></span>
-<span class="smcap">“O<b>LIVER</b></span>
-<span class="smcap">T<b>WIST,”</b></span>
-<span class="smcap">“M<b>ARTIN</b></span>
-<span class="smcap">C<b>HUZZLEWIT,”</b></span>
-<span class="smcap">“T<b>HE</b></span> <span
-class="smcap">S<b>TRANGE</b></span> <span
-class="smcap">G<b>ENTLEMAN,”</b></span> <span
-class="smcap">“P<b>ICTURES</b></span> <span class="smmaj">FROM</span>
-<span class="smcap">I<b>TALY,”</b></span> <span
-class="smmaj">AND</span> <span class="smcap">“S<b>KETCHES</b></span>
-<span class="smmaj">BY</span> <span class="smcap">B<b>OZ”</b></span>
-…&#xa0;<a href="#p043" title="go to page 43">43</a></li>
-
-<li class="lihanga">&#x2007;5. <span class="smcap">O<b>N</b></span> <span
-class="smmaj">SOME</span> <span class="smmaj">FURTHER</span>
-<span class="smcap">S<b>UPPRESSED</b></span>
-<span class="smcap">P<b>LATES,</b></span> <span
-class="smcap">E<b>TCHINGS,</b></span> <span
-class="smmaj">AND</span> <span class="smcap">W<b>OOD</b></span>
-<span class="smcap">E<b>NGRAVINGS</b></span> <span
-class="smmaj">BY</span> <span class="smcap">G<b>EORGE</b></span> <span
-class="smcap">C<b>RUIKSHANK</b></span>
-…&#xa0;<a href="#p059" title="go to page 59">59</a></li>
-
-<li class="lihanga">&#x2007;6. <span class="smcap">H<b>OGARTH’S</b></span>
-<span class="smcap">“E<b>NTHUSIASM</b></span> <span
-class="smcap">D<b>ELINEATED,”</b></span> <span
-class="smcap">“T<b>HE</b></span> <span class="smcap">M<b>AN</b></span>
-<span class="smmaj">OF</span> <span class="smcap">T<b>ASTE,”</b></span>
-<span class="smmaj">AND</span> <span class="smcap">“D<b>ON</b></span>
-<span class="smcap">Q<b>UIXOTE”</b></span>
-…&#xa0;<a href="#p082" title="go to page 82">82</a></li>
-
-<li class="lihanga">&#x2007;7. <span class="smcap">C<b>ANCELLED</b></span> <span
-class="smcap">D<b>ESIGNS</b></span> <span class="smmaj">FOR</span>
-<span class="smcap">“P<b>UNCH”</b></span> <span
-class="smmaj">AND</span> <span class="smcap">“O<b>NCE</b></span> <span
-class="smcap">a</span> <span class="smcap">W<b>EEK”</b></span> <span
-class="smmaj">BY</span> <span class="smcap">C<b>HARLES</b></span>
-<span class="smcap">K<b>EENE</b></span> <span class="smmaj">AND</span>
-<span class="smcap">F<b>REDERICK</b></span> <span
-class="smcap">S<b>ANDYS</b></span>
-…&#xa0;<a href="#p127" title="go to page 127">127</a></li>
-
-<li class="lihanga">&#x2007;8. <span class="smcap">M<b>ISCELLANEOUS</b></span>
-…&#xa0;<a href="#p149" title="go to page 149">149</a></li>
-
-<li class="lihanga">&#x2007;9. <span class="smcap">T<b>HE</b></span>
-<span class="smcap">S<b>UPPRESSED</b></span>
-<span class="smcap">O<b>MAR</b></span> <span
-class="smcap">K<b>HAYYAM</b></span> <span
-class="smcap">E<b>TCHING</b></span>
-…&#xa0;<a href="#p179" title="go to page 179">179</a></li>
-
-<li class="lihanga">10. <span class="smcap">A<b>DAPTED</b></span> <span
-class="smmaj">OR</span> <span class="smcap">P<b>ALIMPSEST</b></span>
-<span class="smcap">P<b>LATES</b></span>
-…&#xa0;<a href="#p192" title="go to page 192">192</a></li>
-
-<li class="lihanga"><span class="nowrap">11. <span class="smcap">A<b>DAPTED</b></span></span>
-<span class="smmaj">OR</span> <span class="smcap">P<b>ALIMPSEST</b></span>
-<span class="smcap">P<b>LATES</b></span> (<i>continued</i>)
-…&#xa0;<a href="#p226" title="go to page 226">226</a></li></ul></li></ul></div>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="h2herein">LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS</h2>
-
-<h3><i>Printed Separately</i></h3>
-
-<p class="ploi">The Title-page of the unwritten “Death in London”
-<a class="aloi" href="#f1.1" title="go to figure 1.1">▶</a>
-<span class="sploia">…&#xa0;<i>Frontispiece</i></span></p>
-
-<p class="ploi">The Third Marquis of Hertford. (<i>From the
-engraving by W. Holl, of the painting by Sir Thomas Lawrence</i>)
-<a class="aloi" href="#f1.2" title="go to figure 1.2">▶</a>
-<span class="sploia">…&#xa0;<i>Between pages</i> 20 <i>and</i> 21</span></p>
-
-<p class="ploi">The Fourth Marquis of Hertford. (<i>From a photograph</i>)
-<a class="aloi" href="#f1.3" title="go to figure 1.3">▶</a>
-<span class="sploia">…&#xa0;<i>Between pages</i> 20 <i>and</i> 21</span></p>
-
-<p class="ploi">The Third Marquis of Hertford when Lord Yarmouth.
-(<i>From the coloured caricature by Richard Dighton</i>)
-<a class="aloi" href="#f1.4" title="go to figure 1.4">▶</a>
-<span class="sploia">…&#xa0;<i>Facing page</i> 24</span></p>
-
-<p class="ploi">The suppressed portrait of Charles Dickens
-<a class="aloi" href="#f1.5" title="go to figure 1.5">▶</a>
-<span class="sploia">…&#xa0;<i>Facing page</i> 28</span></p>
-
-<p class="ploi">The “Pickwick” suppressed plate: “The Cricket Match.”
-(<i>By R. W. Buss</i>)
-<a class="aloi" href="#f1.6" title="go to figure 1.6">▶</a>
-<span class="sploia">…&#xa0;<i>Facing page</i> 30</span></p>
-
-<p class="ploi">The “Pickwick” suppressed plate: “Tupman and Rachel.” (<i>By R. W.
-Buss</i>)
-<a class="aloi" href="#f1.7" title="go to figure 1.7">▶</a>
-<span class="sploia">…&#xa0;<i>Between pages</i> 32 <i>and</i> 33</span></p>
-
-<p class="ploi">“Tupman and Rachel.” (<i>By H. K. Browne</i>)
-<a class="aloi" href="#f1.8" title="go to figure 1.8">▶</a>
-<span class="sploia">…&#xa0;<i>Between pages</i> 32
-<i>and</i> 33</span></p>
-
-<p class="ploi">“The Last Song,” with the suppressed border
-(<i>By George Cruikshank</i>)
-<a class="aloi" href="#f1.9" title="go to figure 1.9">▶</a>
-<span class="sploia">…&#xa0;<i>Facing page</i> 40</span></p>
-
-<p class="ploi">The suppressed plate from “Oliver Twist”
-<a class="aloi" href="#f1.10" title="go to figure 1.10">▶</a>
-<span class="sploia">…&#xa0;<i>Facing page</i> 48</span></p>
-
-<p class="ploia">1. “The Fireside Scene”</p>
-
-<p class="ploia">2. “The Fireside Scene,” as worked upon by Cruikshank</p>
-
-<p class="ploi">The suppressed plate from “Sketches by Boz”
-<a class="aloi" href="#f1.11" title="go to figure 1.11">▶</a>
-<span class="sploia">…&#xa0;<i>Facing page</i> 56</span></p>
-
-<p class="ploi">“A Financial Survey of Cumberland or the Beggar’s Petition.” (<i>From
-the only known uncoloured impression of the plate</i>)
-<a class="aloi" href="#f1.12" title="go to figure 1.12">▶</a>
-<span class="sploia">…&#xa0;<i>Between
-pages</i> 64 <i>and</i> 65</span></p>
-
-<p class="ploi">“A Financial Survey of Cumberland or the Beggar’s Petition.” (<i>From
-a coloured impression of the plate, with the figure of the valet
-oblit­er­at­ed with lamp-black</i>)
-<a class="aloi" href="#f1.13" title="go to figure 1.13">▶</a>
-<span class="sploia">…&#xa0;<i>Between pages</i> 64 <i>and</i> 65</span></p>
-
-<p class="ploi">“Enthusiasm Delineated. (Humbly dedicated to his Grace the Arch Bishop
-of Canterbury by his Graces most obedient humble Servant <i>Wm.
-Hogarth</i>”)
-<a class="aloi" href="#f1.14" title="go to figure 1.14">▶</a>
-<span class="sploia">…&#xa0;<i>Between pages</i> 88 <i>and</i> 89</span></p>
-
-<p class="ploi">“Credulity, Superstition, and Fanaticism. A Medley”
-<a class="aloi" href="#f1.15" title="go to figure 1.15">▶</a>
-<span class="sploia">…&#xa0;<i>Between
-pages</i> 88 <i>and</i> 89</span></p>
-
-<p class="ploi">Portrait of Hogarth with his Dog Trump
-<a class="aloi" href="#f1.16" title="go to figure 1.16">▶</a>
-<span class="sploia">…&#xa0;<i>Facing page</i> 112</span></p>
-
-<p class="ploia"><i>The plate reversed and in its last state,
-now en­ti­tled</i> “The Bruiser”
-<span class="sploia">…&#xa0;<i>Facing page</i> 112</span></p>
-
-<p class="ploi">The Cancelled Cartoon. (<i>By Charles Keene</i>)
-<a class="aloi" href="#f1.17" title="go to figure 1.17">▶</a>
-<span class="sploia">…&#xa0;<i>Facing page</i> 128</span></p>
-
-<p class="ploi">The Cancelled “Social.” (<i>By Charles Keene</i>)
-<a class="aloi" href="#f1.18" title="go to figure 1.18">▶</a>
-<span class="sploia">…&#xa0;<i>Facing page</i> 136</span></p>
-
-<p class="ploia">Suggestion by Joseph Crawhall for the Cancelled “Social”
-<span class="sploia">…&#xa0;<i>Facing
-page</i> 136</span></p>
-
-<p class="ploi">“The Painted Chamber.” (From <i>Antiquities of West­min­ster</i>, 1807)
-<a class="aloi" href="#f1.19" title="go to figure 1.19">▶</a>
-<span class="sploia">…&#xa0;<i>Facing page</i> 150</span></p>
-
-<p class="ploi">The suppressed portrait of “John Jorrocks, Esq., M.F.H., etc.” (<i>By
-Henry Alken, the younger</i>)
-<a class="aloi" href="#f1.20" title="go to figure 1.20">▶</a>
-<span class="sploia">…&#xa0;<i>Facing page</i> 160</span></p>
-
-<p class="ploi">The suppressed frontispiece for “Omar Khayyam.” (<i>By Edwin Edwards</i>)
-<a class="aloi" href="#f1.21" title="go to figure 1.21">▶</a>
-<span class="sploia">…&#xa0;<i>Facing page</i> 188</span></p>
-
-<p class="ploi">“L’Europe alarmée pour le Fils d’un Meunier.” (<i>The plate in its first
-state</i>)
-<a class="aloi" href="#f1.22" title="go to figure 1.22">▶</a>
-<span class="sploia">…&#xa0;<i>Between pages</i> 204 <i>and</i> 205</span></p>
-
-<p class="ploi"><i>The plate in its second state, now entitled</i> “La Cour de Paix
-solitaire, entre les Roses piquantes et les Lis”
-<a class="aloi" href="#f1.23" title="go to figure 1.23">▶</a>
-<span class="sploia">…&#xa0;<i>Between
-pages</i> 204 <i>and</i> 205</span></p>
-
-<p class="ploi">Queen Anne presiding over the House of Lords. (<i>The plate in its first
-state</i>)
-<a class="aloi" href="#f1.24" title="go to figure 1.24">▶</a>
-<span class="sploia">…&#xa0;<i>Between pages</i> 236 <i>and</i> 237</span></p>
-
-<p class="ploi"><i>The plate in its second state, now representing</i> George I. presiding
-over the House of Lords
-<a class="aloi" href="#f1.25" title="go to figure 1.25">▶</a>
-<span class="sploia">…&#xa0;<i>Between pages</i> 236 <i>and</i> 237</span></p>
-
-<p class="ploi">“The Races of the Europeans, with their Keys.” (<i>The plate in its
-first state</i>)
-<a class="aloi" href="#f1.26" title="go to figure 1.26">▶</a>
-<span class="sploia">…&#xa0;<i>Between pages</i> 238 <i>and</i> 239</span></p>
-
-<p class="ploi">“A Skit on Britain.” (<i>The plate in its second state</i>)
-<a class="aloi" href="#f1.27" title="go to figure 1.27">▶</a>
-<span class="sploia">…&#xa0;<i>Between
-pages</i> 238 <i>and</i> 239</span></p>
-
-<p class="ploi">The Headless Horseman. (<i>The plate with the head burnished out</i>)
-<a class="aloi" href="#f1.28" title="go to figure 1.28">▶</a>
-<span class="sploia">…&#xa0;<i>Facing page</i> 240</span></p>
-
-<p class="ploi">The plate with Cromwell’s head
-<a class="aloi" href="#f1.29" title="go to figure 1.29">▶</a>
-<span class="sploia">…&#xa0;<i>Between pages</i> 242 <i>and</i> 243</span></p>
-
-<p class="ploi">The plate with Charles I.’s head
-<a class="aloi" href="#f1.30" title="go to figure 1.30">▶</a>
-<span class="sploia">…&#xa0;<i>Between pages</i> 242 <i>and</i> 243</span></p>
-
-<p class="ploi">Undescribed palimpsest plate. (<i>First state and second state</i>)
-<a class="aloi" href="#f1.31" title="go to figure 1.31">▶</a>
-<span class="sploia">…&#xa0;<i>Facing page</i> 244</span></p>
-
-<p class="ploi">Undescribed palimpsest plate. (<i>First state and second state</i>)
-<a class="aloi" href="#f1.32" title="go to figure 1.32">▶</a>
-<span class="sploia">…&#xa0;<i>Facing page</i> 246</span></p>
-</div><!--chapter-->
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h3><i>Printed in the Text</i></h3>
-
-<p class="ploi">&#x2007;1. The Suppressed Portrait of the Marquis of Steyne
-<a class="aloi" href="#f2.1" title="go to figure 2.1">▶</a>
-<span class="sploia">…&#xa0;15</span></p>
-
-<p class="ploi">&#x2007;2. The Battle of Life. “Leech’s Grave Mistake”
-<a class="aloi" href="#f2.2" title="go to figure 2.2">▶</a>
-<span class="sploia">…&#xa0;35</span></p>
-
-<p class="ploi">&#x2007;3. Rose Maylie and Oliver at Agnes’s Tomb. (<i>The substituted plate in
-two states</i>)
-<a class="aloi" href="#f2.3" title="go to figure 2.3">▶</a>
-<span class="sploia">…&#xa0;51</span></p>
-
-<p class="ploi">&#x2007;4. The Strange Gentleman
-<a class="aloi" href="#f2.4" title="go to figure 2.4">▶</a>
-<span class="sploia">…&#xa0;55</span></p>
-
-<p class="ploi">&#x2007;5. “A Trifling Mistake”—Corrected—
-<a class="aloi" href="#f2.5" title="go to figure 2.5">▶</a>
-<span class="sploia">…&#xa0;71</span></p>
-
-<p class="ploi">&#x2007;6. Philoprogenitiveness
-<a class="aloi" href="#f2.6" title="go to figure 2.6">▶</a>
-<span class="sploia">…&#xa0;77</span></p>
-
-<p class="ploi">&#x2007;7. “Drop it!”
-<a class="aloi" href="#f2.7" title="go to figure 2.7">▶</a>
-<span class="sploia">…&#xa0;79</span></p>
-
-<p class="ploi">&#x2007;8. Enlarged detail of Hogarth’s “Enthusiasm Delineated”
-<a class="aloi" href="#f2.8" title="go to figure 2.8">▶</a>
-<span class="sploia">…&#xa0;85</span></p>
-
-<p class="ploi">&#x2007;9. The Chandelier in “Enthusiasm”
-<a class="aloi" href="#f2.9" title="go to figure 2.9">▶</a>
-<span class="sploia">…&#xa0;95</span></p>
-
-<p class="ploia">The Chandelier in “Credulity”
-<span class="sploia">…&#xa0;95</span></p>
-
-<p class="ploi">10. The Man of Taste
-<a class="aloi" href="#f2.10" title="go to figure 2.10">▶</a>
-<span class="sploia">…&#xa0;105</span></p>
-
-<p class="ploi">11. Burlington Gate as it appeared prior to 1868
-<a class="aloi" href="#f2.11" title="go to figure 2.11">▶</a>
-<span class="sploia">…&#xa0;109</span></p>
-
-<p class="ploi">12. Don Quixote, No. 1.—The Innkeeper
-<a class="aloi" href="#f2.12" title="go to figure 2.12">▶</a>
-<span class="sploia">…&#xa0;115</span></p>
-
-<p class="ploi">13. Don Quixote, No. 2.—The Funeral of Chrysostom
-<a class="aloi" href="#f2.13" title="go to figure 2.13">▶</a>
-<span class="sploia">…&#xa0;117</span></p>
-
-<p class="ploi">14. Don Quixote, No. 3.—The Innkeeper’s Wife and Daughter
-<a class="aloi" href="#f2.14" title="go to figure 2.14">▶</a>
-<span class="sploia">…&#xa0;119</span></p>
-
-<p class="ploi">15. Don Quixote, No. 4.—Don Quixote seizes the Barber’s Basin
-<a class="aloi" href="#f2.15" title="go to figure 2.15">▶</a>
-<span class="sploia">…&#xa0;120</span></p>
-
-<p class="ploi">16. Don Quixote, No. 5.—Don Quixote releases the Galley Slaves
-<a class="aloi" href="#f2.16" title="go to figure 2.16">▶</a>
-<span class="sploia">…&#xa0;122</span></p>
-
-<p class="ploi">17. Don Quixote, No. 6.—The First Interview
-<a class="aloi" href="#f2.17" title="go to figure 2.17">▶</a>
-<span class="sploia">…&#xa0;123</span></p>
-
-<p class="ploi">18. Don Quixote, No. 7.—The Curate and the Barber
-<a class="aloi" href="#f2.18" title="go to figure 2.18">▶</a>
-<span class="sploia">…&#xa0;125</span></p>
-
-<p class="ploi">19. Danaë in the Brazen Chamber
-<a class="aloi" href="#f2.19" title="go to figure 2.19">▶</a>
-<span class="sploia">…&#xa0;143</span></p>
-
-<p class="ploi">20. Suppressed Illustration from <i>The Vicar of Wakefield</i>
-<a class="aloi" href="#f2.20" title="go to figure 2.20">▶</a>
-<span class="sploia">…&#xa0;172</span></p>
-
-<p class="ploi">21. Het beest van Babel, etc. (<i>The plate in its first state</i>)
-<a class="aloi" href="#f2.21" title="go to figure 2.21">▶</a>
-<span class="sploia">…&#xa0;218</span></p>
-
-<p class="ploi">22. Het beest van Babel, etc. (<i>The plate in its second state</i>)
-<a class="aloi" href="#f2.22" title="go to figure 2.22">▶</a>
-<span class="sploia">…&#xa0;219</span></p>
-
-<p class="ploi">23. Aan der Meester Tonge-Slyper. (<i>The plate in its first state</i>)
-<a class="aloi" href="#f2.23" title="go to figure 2.23">▶</a>
-<span class="sploia">…&#xa0;229</span></p>
-
-<p class="ploia">Aan der Meester Tonge-Slyper. (<i>As adapted by the Anti-Jesuits</i>)
-<span class="sploia">…&#xa0;229</span></p>
-
-<p class="ploi">24. The Stature of a Great Man, or the English Colossus
-<a class="aloi" href="#f2.24" title="go to figure 2.24">▶</a>
-<span class="sploia">…&#xa0;234</span></p>
-
-<p class="ploi">25. The Stature of a Great Man, or the Scotch Colossus
-<a class="aloi" href="#f2.25" title="go to figure 2.25">▶</a>
-<span class="sploia">…&#xa0;235</span></p>
-
-<p class="ploi">26. Aan den Experten Hollandschen Hoofd-Smith. (<i>The plate in its
-first state</i>)
-<a class="aloi" href="#f2.26" title="go to figure 2.26">▶</a>
-<span class="sploia">…&#xa0;245</span></p>
-
-<p class="ploi">27. Aan den Experten Hollandschen Hoofd-Smith. (<i>As adapted by the
-Anti-Jesuits</i>)
-<a class="aloi" href="#f2.27" title="go to figure 2.27">▶</a>
-<span class="sploia">…&#xa0;245</span></p>
-
-<p class="ploi">28. An adapted Copperplate. (<i>First state</i>)
-<a class="aloi" href="#f2.28" title="go to figure 2.28">▶</a>
-<span class="sploia">…&#xa0;247</span></p>
-
-<p class="ploi">29. An adapted Copperplate. (<i>Second state</i>)
-<a class="aloi" href="#f2.29" title="go to figure 2.29">▶</a>
-<span class="sploia">…&#xa0;247</span></p>
-
-<p class="ploi">30. A History of the New Plot. (<i>First state</i>)
-<a class="aloi" href="#f2.30" title="go to figure 2.30">▶</a>
-<span class="sploia">…&#xa0;249</span></p>
-
-<p class="ploi">31. A History of the New Plot. (<i>Second state</i>)
-<a class="aloi" href="#f2.31" title="go to figure 2.31">▶</a>
-<span class="sploia">…&#xa0;249</span></p>
-</div><!--chapter-->
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<div class="fsz2" id="p001">SUPPRESSED PLATES, ETC.</div>
-
-<h2 class="h2herein">CHAPTER I
-<span class="h2smallctr">INTRODUCTORY</span></h2></div>
-
-<p class="pfirst"><span class="smcap">N<b>O</b></span>
-one who has the itch for book-collecting will
-deny that suppressed book illus­tra­tions are, what
-the forbidden fruit was to our mother Eve,
-irresistible. Whether such appetite represents the
-very proper ambition to have at his elbow the
-earliest states of beautiful or interesting books,
-of which the subsequently suppressed plate or
-wood engraving is in general a sort of guarantee,
-or the less defensible desire to possess what our
-neighbour does not, must be settled by the conscience
-of each. The fact remains that such
-rarities are peculiarly alluring to those whom
-Wotton calls “the lickerish chapmen of all such
-ware.” <span class="xxpn" id="p002">{2}</span></p>
-
-<p>There are, of course, ridiculous<a class="afnanc" href="#fn1" id="fnanc1">1</a>
-people who
-value such books as the first issue of the
-first edition of Dickens’s <i>American Notes</i> just
-because there is a mistake in the pagination; or
-a first edition of Disraeli’s <i>Lothair</i> because the
-prototype of “Monsignor Catesby” is divulged by
-misprinting the name “Capel”; or <i>Poems</i> by
-Robert Burns, first Edinburgh Edition, because in
-the list of subscribers “The Duke of Roxborough”
-appears as “The Duke of Boxborough”; or
-Barker’s “Breeches” Bible of 1594, because on the
-title-page of the New Testament the figures are
-transposed to 1495; or the first edition in French
-of Washington Irving’s <i>Sketch Book</i>, because
-the translator, maltreating the author’s name, has
-declared the book to be “traduit de l’Anglais de
-M. Irwin Washington,” and in the dedication has
-labelled Sir Walter Scott, <i>Barronnet</i>; or indeed a
-book of my own, in which I described as “since
-dead” a gifted and genial gentleman who I am
-glad to think still gives the lie to my inexcusable
-carelessness. <span class="xxpn" id="p003">{3}</span></p>
-
-<p>But it is not <i>because</i> of such errors that a
-true book-lover desires to own <i>editiones principes</i>
-of famous works. That ambition is legitimate
-enough, but its legitimate reason is otherwhere to
-seek.</p>
-
-<p>In the case of such a book as Rogers’s <i>Italy</i>, with the Turner
-engravings, the matter is very dif­fer­ent. Here the fact that the
-plates on pp. 88 and
-91 are trans­posed is a guaran­tee that the im­pres­sions of
-the extra­or­di­narily del­i­cate en­grav­ings are of the utmost
-bril­liancy, for the error was dis­cov­ered before many im­pres­sions
-had been taken. The same applies, though in lesser degree, to such a
-book as Mr. Austin Dobson’s <i>Ballad of Beau Brocade</i>, il­lus­trat­ed
-by Mr. Hugh Thomson, in the earliest edition of which certain of the
-illus­tra­tions are also misplaced.<a class="afnanc" href="#fn2"
-id="fnanc2">2</a> There is reason in wishing to possess these. See what
-Ruskin himself has said of the omission of the two engravings which
-had appeared in the first edition of <i>The Two Paths</i>. He writes in the
-preface to the 1878 reissue:</p>
-
-<div class="dftnt">
-<p class="pfirst">&#x2007;<a class="afnlabel" href="#fnanc1" id="fn1">1</a>
-I am quite aware that “ridiculous” is a dangerous stone to throw,
-when one lives in a glass house oneself.</p>
-
-<p class="pfirst padtopc">&#x2007;<a class="afnlabel" href="#fnanc2" id="fn2">2</a>
-Compare also the early issues of the first edition of Ainsworth’s
-<i>Tower of London</i>, in which the plates at pp. 28 and 45 vary from
-those in the later issues.</p></div>
-
-<div><span class="xxpn" id="p004">{4}</span></div>
-
-<p>“I own to a very enjoyable pride in making
-the first editions of my books valuable to their
-possessors, who found out, before other people,
-that these writings and drawings were good for
-something .&#xa0;.&#xa0;. and the two lovely engravings
-by Messrs. Cuff and Armytage will, I hope, render
-the old volume more or less classical among
-collectors.” From this we gather that “the
-Professor” was of the right kidney.</p>
-
-<p>It is hardly necessary to say that it is not my
-intention to make this book a devil’s directory to
-illus­tra­tions which have been suppressed because
-of indecency, and are referred to in the catalogues
-of second-hand booksellers, whose cupidity
-is stronger than their self-respect, as “facetiæ” or
-“very curious.” Indeed, this book would itself in
-that case also very properly be put on the index
-expurgatorius of every decent person. My purpose
-is to gather together, correct and amplify the floating
-details concerning a legitimate class of rarities,
-and to put the collector on his guard, where
-necessary, against imposition.</p>
-
-<p>By its very nature this treatise cannot be
-complete, but I have included most of the
-<span class="xxpn" id="p005">{5}</span>
-examples of any importance which, during many
-years of bibliomania, have come under my observation.
-To these I have added certain re-engraved
-or palimpsest plates, which are germane to the
-subject.</p>
-
-<p>As to these last I find amongst my papers
-a curious note from the pen of R. H. Cromek,
-the engraver, who flourished at the end of the
-eighteenth century.</p>
-
-<p>“One of these vendors,” he writes (publishers
-of Family Bibles), “lately called to consult me
-professionally about an engraving he brought
-with him. It represented Mons. Buffon seated,
-contemplating various groups of animals surrounding
-him. He merely wished, he said, to
-be informed whether, by engaging my services to
-unclothe the naturalist, and giving him a rather
-more resolute look, <i>the plate could not, at a trifling
-expense, be made to do duty for ‘Daniel in the
-lions’ den’</i>”!</p>
-
-<p>That would be a palimpsest well worth possessing,
-if ever it were carried into effect. It would
-be as fascinating an object of contemplation as
-the Stothard designs for <i>Clarissa Harlowe</i>,
-<span class="xxpn" id="p006">{6}</span>
-which the same authority informs us were later
-used to il­lus­trate the Scriptures! But the history
-of the <i>cliché</i>, pure and simple, has yet to be
-written. Our concern is with higher game than
-that.</p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="h2herein" id="p007">CHAPTER II
-<span class="h2smallctr">“THE
- MARQUIS OF STEYNE”</span></h2></div>
-
-<p class="pfirst"><span class="smcap">P<b>ERHAPS</b></span>
-the most celebrated of sup­pressed book
-il­lus­tra­tions is the wood-engraved por­trait of the
-“Marquis of Steyne,” drawn by Thackeray as an
-illus­tra­tion to <i>Vanity Fair</i>, for which, if we are
-to believe the state­ment of a well-known book­seller’s
-cat­a­logue, “libel­lous pro­ceed­ings (<i>sic</i>) were
-threatened on account of its strik­ing like­ness to a
-mem­ber of the aris­to­cracy.” With the accuracy
-of this state­ment I shall deal in due course.</p>
-
-<p>Before, however, proceeding to the con­sid­er­ation
-of the suppressed illus­tra­tion itself, it will be as
-well to pause for a moment to consider what
-antecedent probability there was that Thackeray
-would pillory a well-known <i>roué</i> of the period in
-terms that would make the likeness undoubted and
-undeniable. And in pointing out what the great
-<span class="xxpn" id="p008">{8}</span>
-novelist’s practice was in this respect I would
-guard myself against the charge of presuming to
-censure one who is not here to answer for himself,
-and whose nobility of character was sufficient
-guarantee of good faith and honourable intention.
-Let it always be remembered that, if Thackeray
-flagellated others, he never hesitated to taste the
-quality of his own whip first. Even in his book
-illus­tra­tions, as I have pointed out elsewhere, he
-was as unsparing of his own feelings as he was in
-his writings. And, in using himself as a whipping-boy
-for our sins, he probably believed that he was
-making himself as despicable as a Rousseau. Hence
-he came to the like treatment of other real
-personages not with unclean hands.</p>
-
-<p>Some of us may have seen, though very few of
-us can possess, a very rare pamphlet, which was
-sold for as much as £39 on one of its infrequent
-appearances in the auction-rooms, entitled <i>Mr.
-Thackeray, Mr. Yates, and the Garrick Club</i>. In
-it was published a never-sent reply to a letter
-written by Thackeray remonstrating with Yates
-on the contents of a “pen-and-ink” sketch published
-by the latter in No. 6 of a periodical
-called <i>Town <span class="xxpn" id="p009">{9}</span>
-Talk</i>, which resulted in Yates’s expulsion from the
-Garrick Club.</p>
-
-<p>In this unsent letter he charged Thackeray with
-having unjustifiably introduced portraits both in
-his letterpress and illus­tra­tions. Mr. Stephen
-Price appeared as Captain Shindy in the <i>Book of
-Snobs</i>. In the same book Thackeray drew on a
-wood block what was practically a portrait of
-Wyndham Smith, a fellow-clubman. This appeared
-amongst “Sporting Snobs,” Mr. Smith being a
-well-known sporting man. In <i>Pendennis</i> he made
-a sketch of a former member of the Garrick Club,
-Captain Granby Calcraft, under the name of
-Captain Granby Tiptoff. In the same book,
-under the transparent guise of the unforgettable
-Foker, he reproduced every characteristic, both in
-language, manner, and gesture, of Mr. Andrew
-Arcedeckne, and even went so far as to give an
-unmistakable portrait of him, to that gentleman’s
-great annoyance.</p>
-
-<p>Besides the examples given by Yates, who was
-himself recognisable as George Garbage in <i>The
-Virginians</i>, we know, too, that in the same novel
-Theodore Hook appeared as Wagg, just as he did
-<span class="xxpn" id="p010">{10}</span>
-as Stanislaus Hoax in Disraeli’s <i>Vivian Grey</i>, and
-that Alfred Bunn was the prototype of Mr.
-Dolphin. Archdeacon Allen was the original of
-Dobbin, Lady Langford of Lady Kew; and last,
-but not least, we have lately learned from Mrs.
-Ritchie that the inimitable Becky had undoubtedly
-her incarnation.</p>
-
-<p>So we see that the antecedent improbability is
-as the snakes in Iceland; for the above examples,
-which no doubt could be largely added to, prove
-that Thackeray did not hesitate to draw direct
-from the model when it suited his purpose.</p>
-
-<p>So far so good. Let us now proceed to inquire
-into the identity of the “Marquis of Steyne.”</p>
-
-<p>That his prototype was <i>a</i> Marquis of Hertford is
-axiomatic with all those who have ever taken any
-interest in the subject; but when we come to
-inquire which marquis we find that opinions are
-astonishingly at variance. It would seem almost
-as though any Marquis of Hertford would serve,
-whereas in point of fact the portrait would be the
-grossest libel upon each of that noble line save
-one; and so incidentally we shall, by making the
-matter clear, rescue from calumny an honourable
-<span class="xxpn" id="p011">{11}</span>
-race, which has hitherto through heedlessness been
-tarred with the same brush as its least honourable
-rep­re­sen­ta­tive.</p>
-
-<p>To show that this is not a reckless charge of
-inaccuracy, I quote from four letters in my
-possession written by four persons most likely to
-have special knowledge upon the subject.</p>
-
-<p>The first, which is from a well-known printseller,
-informs me “that the Marquis of Steyne in <i>Vanity
-Fair</i> was Francis, second Marquis of Hertford,
-who died in 1822.”</p>
-
-<p>The second, which is from one more intimately
-acquainted with the family than any other living
-person, says, “Unquestionably Francis, third
-Marquis of Hertford, the intimate friend of
-George IV., was the prototype of the Marquis of
-Steyne in Thackeray’s <i>Vanity Fair</i>.”</p>
-
-<p>The third letter, which is from a well-known
-London editor, in general the best-informed man I
-have ever met, says, “It was the fourth Lord, who
-died in 1870.”</p>
-
-<p>The last of the four letters supports this view and
-says: “It was the fourth, not the third, Marquis
-of Hertford who was supposed to be the prototype
-<span class="xxpn" id="p012">{12}</span>
-of Thackeray’s Marquis of Steyne. .&#xa0;.&#xa0;. He was
-Richard Seymour Conway, who was born in 1800
-and died in 1870.”<a class="afnanc" href="#fn3" id="fnanc3">3</a></p>
-
-<p>Now, considering that these are the only
-opinions for which I have asked, and that they
-are so curiously divergent, it will, I think, be clear
-that it is time an authoritative declaration were
-forthcoming, based upon independent inquiries.</p>
-
-<p>It may as well, then, be stated once for all that
-no one who has taken the trouble to investigate
-the lives of the three marquises above mentioned
-can hesitate for a moment in identifying the
-“Marquis of Steyne” with the third Marquis of
-Hertford. To those who are curious to know
-very full particulars about these noblemen I
-would recommend the perusal of an interesting
-article entitled “Two Marquises” in <i>Lippincott’s
-Magazine</i> for February 1874. Nor should they
-fail to read Disraeli’s <i>Coningsby</i>, and compare
-“Lord Monmouth” and his creature “Rigby,”
-whose prototypes were the same Marquis of
-Hertford and <i>his</i> creature
-Croker, with the <span class="xxpn" id="p013">{13}</span>
-“Marquis of Steyne” and <i>his</i> managing man “Wenham.”</p>
-
-<p>And, whilst we are identifying the third
-Marquis in <i>Coningsby</i> and <i>Vanity Fair</i>, reference
-may be made to another most unflattering
-portrait of that notorious nobleman in a book
-published anonymously in 1844, which was
-<i>immediately</i> suppressed, but is now not infrequently
-to be found in second-hand book catalogues. The
-book was (I believe) written by John Mills, and
-had ten clever etched plates by George Standfast
-(probably a <i>nom de plume</i>). Copies in the parts as
-published are excessively rare. The title of the
-book is <i>D’Horsay; or the Follies of the Day, by a
-Man of Fashion</i>.<a class="afnanc" href="#fn4" id="fnanc4">4</a>
-It dealt with the escapades,
-vices, and adventures of well-known men of the day
-under the following transparent pseudonyms:
-Count d’Horsay, the Marquis of Hereford, the
-Earl of Chesterlane, Mr. Pelham, General Reel,
-Lord George Bentick, Mr. George Robbins,
-auctioneer, the Earl of Raspberry Hill, Benjamin
-D——i, Lord Hunting-Castle,
-and others. The <span class="xxpn" id="p014">{14}</span>
-account of the “closing scene in the life of the
-greatest debauchee the world has ever seen, the
-Marquis of Hereford,” is too horrible to repeat.</p>
-
-<div class="dftnt">
-<p class="pfirst">&#x2007;<a class="afnlabel" href="#fnanc3" id="fn3">3</a>
-As I write, a great daily newspaper
-informs the world that it was the <i>first</i> Marquis.</p>
-
-<p class="pfirst padtopc">&#x2007;<a class="afnlabel" href="#fnanc4" id="fn4">4</a>
-This scurrilous and poorly written book has lately been thought
-worthy of resurrection and repub­li­ca­tion.</p></div>
-
-<p>So much for the identity of the “Marquis of
-Steyne” as described in Thackeray’s letterpress,
-which need not be dwelt upon here at greater
-length, seeing that the immediate object of this
-chapter is to deal with the accompanying engraving
-and its history. And in proceeding to this
-examination it should not be forgotten, in fairness
-to the novelist, that Thackeray has explained that
-his characters were made up of little bits of various
-persons. This is no doubt true enough. At the
-same time, we cannot but be aware that, although
-the details may have been gathered, the outline has
-been drawn direct from the life.</p>
-
-<div class="dctr03" id="f2.1">
-<img src="images/i015.png" width="518" height="700" alt="" />
-<div class="dcaption">The Suppressed Portrait
-of the Marquis of Steyne</div></div>
-
-<p><i>Vanity Fair</i> was issued originally in monthly
-parts. Its first title was <i>Vanity Fair: Pen and
-Pencil Sketches of English Society</i>. Its first
-number was dated “January 1847,” and had
-“illus­tra­tions on steel and wood by the Author.”
-On p. 336 of the <i>earliest issue</i> of this first edition
-appeared the wood engraving of the Marquis of
-Steyne, wanting which a first edition is, to the
-<span class="xxpn" id="p015">{15}</span>
-biblio­maniac, <i>Hamlet</i> with Hamlet left out. In
-the later issues, the engraving (which I here
-reproduce) was omitted, as also was the “rustic
-type” in which the title appeared on the first
-page.<a class="afnanc" href="#fn5" id="fnanc5">5</a>
-The publishers were Messrs.
-Bradbury and Evans, <span class="xxpn" id="p016">{16}</span>
-as was natural, Thackeray being at this time on
-the staff of <i>Punch</i>. In later editions of the novel,
-published by Messrs. Smith, Elder and Co., the
-engraving reappears—viz. on p. 22 of vol. ii. in the
-standard edition, and on p. 158, vol. ii., of the
-twenty-six-volume edition.<a class="afnanc" href="#fn6" id="fnanc6">6</a></p>
-
-<div class="dftnt">
-<p class="pfirst">&#x2007;<a class="afnlabel" href="#fnanc5" id="fn5">5</a>
-To the rabid bibliophile I here present another variation, which
-has hitherto escaped the bookseller. In the first edition, on p. 453, will
-be found the misprint “Mr.” (for “Sir”) Pitt and Lady Jane Crawley.</p>
-
-<p class="pfirst padtopc">&#x2007;<a class="afnlabel" href="#fnanc6" id="fn6">6</a>
-It does not appear amongst the illus­tra­tions to the biographical
-edition, which are restricted to the full-page plates.</p></div>
-
-<p>What was the reason for its sudden removal
-immediately after pub­li­ca­tion? As I have said
-above, it is commonly stated to have been in
-consequence of a threatened action for libel, of
-course on account of the undoubted likeness of the
-“Marquis of Steyne” to the third Marquis of
-Hertford. But how does this tally with facts?
-Lord Hertford had died in 1842, whilst the first
-number of <i>Vanity Fair</i> did not appear until 1847.
-Now every lawyer knows that you cannot libel
-a dead man. This was made clear some few
-years ago (I think) in the case of the Duke
-of Vallombrosa against a well-known English
-journalist. Therefore it is quite certain that,
-although legal proceedings might have been
-threatened, they would
-certainly have collapsed. <span class="xxpn" id="p017">{17}</span>
-Further than that, those who knew the fourth
-Marquis are aware that he was the last man in the
-world to embark upon a lawsuit or court publicity
-in any way. And if any doubt upon the matter
-should still remain, I am able to state positively
-that no trace is to be discovered amongst the
-Hertford family papers of any action threatened or
-brought against Thackeray on any grounds whatsoever.
-I think, then, that we may dismiss once
-for all this aspect of the case.</p>
-
-<p>At the same time it is not impossible that some
-hint may have reached the novelist’s ears that the
-illus­tra­tion gave pain to persons then living, and
-that he promptly had it removed. But against
-this view there is a very strong presumption. If
-we turn the leaves of our original issue of <i>Vanity
-Fair</i>, we shall, on p. 421, find another wood
-engraving, and opposite p. 458 a full-page steel
-engraving, “The Triumph of Clytemnestra,” both
-containing portraits of “The Marquis of Steyne.”
-Now, considering that that nobleman’s august
-features are as recognisable in these as in the
-suppressed engraving, it seems unreasonable to
-suppose that the one would have been removed
-<span class="xxpn" id="p018">{18}</span>
-without the others, in consequence of family rep­re­sen­ta­tions.</p>
-
-<p>Possibly the real truth of the matter is a very
-much simpler one. It may have been either that
-Thackeray was himself disgusted with the brutal
-frankness of the picture when he saw it printed,
-and insisted on its removal, or that the block met
-with some accident. Indeed, I am inclined to
-think, judging from my memory of the subject,
-that the idea of an action for libel is one that has
-only found expression in more modern booksellers’
-catalogues. If I am not mistaken, the
-older booksellers used to speak of the engraving
-not as “suppressed,” but as “extremely rare,” and
-that it was supposed to have disappeared from
-later issues because it was broken before many
-impressions were taken. Of course, a threatened
-action for libel, on account of its striking likeness
-to a member of the aristocracy, added piquancy
-to the affair, and so redounded to the benefit
-of the vendor of the earliest issue of a first
-edition; and the identification of Lord Steyne’s
-prototype, in the letterpress, gave colour to the
-idea. Once set going, we may be certain that
-<span class="xxpn" id="p019">{19}</span>
-the legend would not be allowed to lapse for lack
-of advertisement. To adapt what Dr. Johnson said
-of the “Countess,” “Sir,” said he to Boswell, “in the
-case of a (marquis) the imagination is more excited.”</p>
-
-<p>The accompanying portraits of the third and
-fourth Marquises of Hertford give the reader an
-opportunity of forming his own opinion in the
-matter of identity. That of the third Marquis
-is from the engraving by William Holl of the
-painting by Sir Thomas Lawrence, and certainly
-seems to suggest, in the prime of life, the features
-and expression which Thackeray has portrayed in
-old age. The bald head, and the arrangement of
-the whiskers—which are allowed to approach the
-corners of the mouth—are incontestable points of
-resemblance; and if the old voluptuary is somewhat
-more battered than Lawrence’s rather spruce
-model, we must remember that his portrait was
-painted by the courtly President of the Royal
-Academy many years before the period of life
-at which he is introduced to us by the novelist.
-Certainly he is not an attractive object; and I
-was amused to receive a letter from a member
-of the family to whom I first showed the wood
-<span class="xxpn" id="p020">{20}</span>
-engraving in which these words occur: “I find we
-have no portrait whatever of the Lord Hertford in
-question, and am not surprised at it if he at all
-resembled that of the Marquis in <i>Vanity Fair</i>!”<a class="afnanc" href="#fn7" id="fnanc7">7</a></p>
-
-<p>As regards the fourth Marquis, it is a curious
-fact that, not­with­stand­ing his vast wealth, and his
-tastes as an artist and connoisseur, no painted
-or engraved portrait of him is known. The
-photograph here reproduced is the only counterfeit
-presentment extant, and is enough, if further
-evidence were needed, to dispose for ever of the
-idea that he was the prototype of the Marquis of
-Steyne. It is hardly necessary to remind the
-reader that it is to him, through Sir Richard and
-Lady Wallace, that the nation owes a debt of
-gratitude for the splendid collection now housed
-in perpetuity in Hertford House.<a class="afnanc" href="#fn8" id="fnanc8">8</a></p>
-
-<div class="dftnt">
-<p class="pfirst">&#x2007;<a class="afnlabel" href="#fnanc7" id="fn7">7</a>
-This is the description of the Marquis in
-<i>Coningsby</i>: “Lord Monmouth was in height above the middle
-size, but somewhat portly and corpulent; his countenance
-was strongly marked: sagacity on the brow, sensuality
-in the mouth and jaw; his head was bald, but there were
-remains of the rich brown hair on which he once prided
-himself. His large, deep blue eye, madid,
-and yet piercing, showed that the secretions of his brain
-were apportioned half to voluptuousness, half to common
-sense.” This might well pass as a description of the
-Thackeray drawing.</p>
-
-<p class="pfirst padtopc">&#x2007;<a class="afnlabel" href="#fnanc8" id="fn8">8</a>
-Just before Lady Wallace’s death, an
-examination of the Hertford House library failed to
-discover a first edition of <i>Vanity Fair</i>, in which I
-fancied some note might possibly have been found. This
-was probably due to the fact that a large number of the
-Hertford books were destroyed in the Pantechnicon fire.</p></div>
-
-<div class="dctr02" id="f1.2">
-<img src="images/i020fp.jpg" width="587" height="700" alt="" />
-<div class="dcaption">The Third Marquis of Hertford.(<i>From the
-engraving by W. Holl, of the painting by Sir Thomas
-Lawrence</i>)</div></div>
-
-<div class="dctr03" id="f1.3">
-<img src="images/i021fp.jpg" width="464" height="700" alt="" />
-<div class="dcaption">The Fourth Marquis of Hertford.
-(<i>From a photograph</i>)</div></div>
-
-<div><span class="xxpn" id="p021">{21}</span></div>
-
-<p>It will be noticed that in this photograph
-Lord Hertford wears his Star of the Order of the
-Garter, to obtain which he made the “tremendous
-sacrifice” of which an amusing account is given in
-the <i>Lippincott</i> article mentioned above. Of him
-the <i>Speaker</i> wrote at the time of his death:</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-<p>Living in Paris a quiet and rather solitary life—in habits
-more a Frenchman than an Englishman; in tastes an artist
-and a connoisseur; in purse and opportunity unlimited by
-any niggard need of self-control—the fourth Marquis of
-Hertford busied himself in gathering together from the
-treasure-houses of Europe innumerable precious specimens
-of the painter’s, the goldsmith’s, and the cabinetmaker’s art.
-Year after year, with tranquil perseverance, he heaped up
-on every side of him all the beautiful objects on which he
-could lay hands—pictures, miniatures, furniture, enamels,
-china and plate, bronzes, and coats of armour—until his
-storehouses were full to overflowing of treasures which,
-except for the pleasure of procuring them, he could hardly
-ever have enjoyed. In this congenial task he was assisted
-by a young Englishman, the secret of whose connection with
-the Hertford family, if any such there was, the public has
-never penetrated yet. To this young Englishman, who was
-well known and liked in Parisian society in the tawdry
-splendour of the Second Empire, and whose active generosity
-<span class="xxpn" id="p022">{22}</span>
-won him wide esteem in that desolated capital amid the
-terrible events of the winter of 1870–71, Lord Hertford
-bequeathed the wonderful possessions which he had accumulated
-in a lifetime of discriminating labour. When the
-Franco-German War and the Commune were over, Richard
-Wallace brought his spoils safely home, and exhibited them
-for a time at the Bethnal Green Museum while he built the
-great galleries to hold them in Manchester Square. But
-even here they were not destined to bring much happiness
-to their possessor. After a short time Sir Richard Wallace
-was left heirless—like Lord Hertford—by a cruel stroke of
-fate; and now, by his widow’s gift, the splendid inheritance,
-which has passed so quickly from the keeping of the hands
-that laid it up, goes to enrich a public which will not be
-ungrateful for the donor’s rare munificence, or unmindful of
-the sad and curious story it recalls.<a class="afnanc" href="#fn9" id="fnanc9">9</a></p></blockquote>
-
-<div class="dftnt">
-<p class="pfirst">&#x2007;<a class="afnlabel" href="#fnanc9" id="fn9">9</a>
-A footnote on p. 229, vol. iv. of G. E. C.’s
-<i>Complete Peerage</i> says: “[The fourth Marquis] is said
-never to have been in England. He left his Irish estates
-(worth £50,000 a year) and most of his personalty (which
-included the well-known Hertford collection of pictures) to
-Sir Richard Wallace, Bart. (so <i>cr.</i> 1866), who is supposed
-to have been an illegit. son, either of himself (when aged
-18), or of his father, or even (not improbably) of his
-mother; which Richard (<i>b.</i> in London, 26th July 1818) <i>d.</i>
-s.p. at Paris, 20th July 1890, in his 72nd year, and was
-<i>bur.</i> in the family vault at Père-la-Chaise. Sir Richard’s
-‘art treasures’ (derived as above stated) were valued at
-his death in 1890 at above two millions.”</p></div>
-
-<p>To return again to the suppressed wood engraving
-itself, it is curious to notice that old “Lady
-Kew” of <i>The Newcomes</i> was sister to Lord
-Steyne. Now the name “Kew”
-at once suggests
-<span class="xxpn" id="p023">{23}</span>
-to those conversant with the early doings of the
-century the nickname of the notorious Duke of
-Queensberry, known to all and sundry as “Old Q,”
-and sets us considering why the name should
-suggest itself to Thackeray in connection with
-Lord Hertford. And what do we find?</p>
-
-<p>When the third Marquis was but twenty-one,
-he married a young lady named Marie Fagniani.
-She was believed to be the daughter of the Duke
-of Queensberry and an opera dancer of that name.
-Nothing would be more natural, therefore, than
-that Thackeray, having saturated himself with the
-surroundings of the prototypes of his characters,
-should, probably half unconsciously, have seized
-upon a capital name suggested to him in the
-course of preparing for his novel, and so adapted
-it to his requirements. This suggestion I only
-make for what it is worth. It may, of course,
-merely be that a search through the suburban
-directory suggested the name, as was no doubt the
-case in apportioning to her ladyship’s husband his
-second title of Lord Walham. At any rate, the
-coincidence seems worth recording.</p>
-
-<p>In conclusion, there can be no possible doubt
-<span class="xxpn" id="p024">{24}</span>
-that so far as Thackeray’s letterpress is concerned,
-the prototype of the Marquis of Steyne (Lord of
-the Powder Closet, etc. etc.) was Francis Charles
-Seymour Conway (third Marquis of Hertford) of
-his branch; Earl of Hertford and Yarmouth,
-Viscount Beauchamp, Baron Conway, and Baron
-of Ragley in England; and Baron Conway and
-Kilultagh in the peerage of Ireland; and as
-regards the suppressed wood engraving, there will,
-I think, be little question that Thackeray the
-artist dotted his i’s by an intentional rep­re­sen­ta­tion
-of the noble lord’s not altogether attractive
-features.</p>
-
-<div class="dctr02" id="f1.4">
-<img src="images/i024fp.jpg" width="600" height="787" alt="" />
-<div class="dcaption">The Third Marquis of Hertford when Lord
-Yarmouth.(<i>From the coloured caricature by Richard
-Dighton</i>)</div></div>
-
-<p>It is, however, only fair to state that Lord
-Hertford was probably by no means the unmitigated
-scoundrel that those familiar with the
-“Marquis of Steyne” might be led to suppose.
-That he participated in all the amusements and
-most of the follies of a notorious society there can
-be little doubt. At the same time, we have it on
-record (in the somewhat pompous diction of the
-period) that he was extensively read in ancient and
-modern literature, that his judgment was remarkable
-for its solidity and sagacity, and that his
-<span class="xxpn" id="p025">{25}</span>
-conversation was enlivened by much of that
-refined and quaint pleasantry which dis­tin­guished
-his near relative, Horace Walpole. He was a
-dis­tin­guished patron of all the arts; and those who
-were more intimately acquainted with his private
-life gave him the still higher praise of being a
-warm, generous, and unalterable friend. “It is
-but justice to add,” to quote the final words of the
-notice referred to, “that the writer has accidentally
-become acquainted with instances of his Lordship’s
-benevolence, the liberality of which was
-equalled only by the delicacy with which it was
-conferred, and the scrupulous care with which he
-endeavoured to conceal it.”</p>
-
-<p>The caricature portrait of the third Marquis
-here reproduced was etched, as will be seen, by
-Richard Dighton in 1818, when this Marquis’s
-father was alive, and he was only the Earl of
-Yarmouth. The watermark on the paper is 1826,
-which explains the inscription “Marquis of Hertford,”
-evidently a later addition—an <i>ex post facto</i>
-puzzle which proved insoluble until it occurred to
-me to hold the portrait up to the light.</p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="h2herein" id="p026">CHAPTER III <span class="h2small">THE
- SUP­PRESSED POR­TRAIT OF DICKENS, “PICK­WICK,” “THE BAT­TLE OF LIFE,” AND
- GRI­MAL­DI</span></h2></div>
-
-<p class="pfirst"><span class="smcap">H<b>AVING</b></span>
-dealt in the last chapter with the
-sup­pres­sion of the well-known Thackeray wood-cut
-of the “Marquis of Steyne,” we naturally turn
-next in order to the other great Victorian novelist,
-Charles Dickens. Much, of course, has been
-written about the Buss plates in <i>Pickwick</i>, and
-much about the “Fireside Scene” in <i>Oliver
-Twist</i>. All readers of Forster’s <i>Life of Charles
-Dickens</i> know something of the wood engraving
-in <i>The Battle of Life</i> which ought to have been,
-but never was, cancelled; and some know what to
-look for in the vignette title of <i>Martin Chuzzlewit</i>.
-It is, however, time that the scattered details
-should be grouped, that re­pro­duc­tions of the plates
-themselves should make reference easy to those
-<span class="xxpn" id="p027">{27}</span>
-who would identify their possessions, and that the
-additional information which is in some cases
-scattered about in various impermanent writings
-of my own and others should be focussed for the
-greater convenience of the collector.</p>
-
-<p>In the first place, I shall present to the reader a
-suppressed portrait of the great novelist, which has,
-I believe, never since been reproduced. It was
-published about the year 1837 by Churton, but
-as to the name of the artist by whom it was etched
-there is a mystery which yet awaits solution. The
-plate is, as will be noticed, signed with the familiar
-pen-name “Phiz,” but was almost immediately
-repudiated by the chartered bearer of that title,
-H. K. Browne. It was promptly withdrawn from
-pub­li­ca­tion, and is now, as a necessary consequence,
-much sought after by the collector.<a class="afnanc" href="#fn10" id="fnanc10">10</a>
-Of it the author of <i>Charles Dickens, the Story
-of his Life</i>, writes:</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-<p>A very remarkable [portrait] was etched about 1837
-with the name “Phiz” at the foot. It represents Dickens
-<span class="xxpn" id="p028">{28}</span>
-seated on a chair and holding a portfolio. In the background
-a Punch-and-Judy performance is going on. The
-face has none of that delicacy and softness about it which
-are observable in the Maclise portrait. It looks, however,
-more like the real young face of the older man, as revealed
-in the photograph now publishing [<i>i.e.</i> just after Dickens’s
-death]. This portrait is very rare, and it is understood
-that it was withdrawn from pub­li­ca­tion soon after it
-appeared. Mr. Hablot K. Browne, the genuine “Phiz,”
-denies all knowledge of it.</p></blockquote>
-
-<div class="dftnt">
-<p class="pfirst"><a class="afnlabel" href="#fnanc10" id="fn10">10</a>
-Since writing this, I have experienced a piece of scurvy luck.
-Entering a shop in the outskirts of Birmingham, I saw an impression
-of the etching lying on a table. I inquired its price and was met by the
-answer that it had just been sold to a lady for eighteenpence!</p></div>
-
-<p>The Hotten memoir thus whets the appetites
-of its readers, but does not offer to satisfy them by
-a re­pro­duc­tion. This obvious duty I therefore
-here take the opportunity of discharging, and
-would advise the book-hunter to make a mental
-note of the etching in that pix of the brain where
-is secreted the reagent which separates the rare
-gold of the bookseller’s threepenny box from its
-too ordinary dross. The re­pro­duc­tion here given
-is about the size of the original etching.</p>
-
-<p>So much for the suppressed portrait. Now
-let us take up our first edition of <i>Pickwick</i>, and
-say what has to be said about the much-discussed
-Buss plates and their substitutes.</p>
-
-<div class="dctr03" id="f1.5">
-<img src="images/i028fp.jpg" width="514" height="800" alt="" />
-<div class="dcaption">
-The suppressed portrait of Charles Dickens</div></div>
-
-<p><i>Pickwick</i>, as we all know, was first published
-in parts, and only one number had appeared when
-<span class="xxpn" id="p029">{29}</span>
-Robert Seymour, its illustrator, died by his own
-hand. Messrs. Chapman and Hall, the publishers,
-were at their wits’ end to get the new number
-il­lus­trat­ed in time for pub­li­ca­tion. Jackson, the
-well-known wood-engraver, who was at the time
-working for them, proposed for the task R. W.
-Buss, a “gentleman already well known to the
-public as a very humorous and talented artist.”
-The publishers gladly adopted the suggestion, and
-the appointment was made.</p>
-
-<p>All this we find very fully set out in Mr. Percy
-Fitzgerald’s <i>History of Pickwick</i>, to which I
-would refer the reader who is anxious to acquaint
-himself with details of the transaction. The Buss
-etchings, which we here reproduce, had for their
-subjects “The Cricket Match” and “Tupman and
-Rachel,” and are to be found respectively opposite
-pp. 69 and 74 of the earliest issues of the first
-edition of the immortal romance. They were, in
-the words of the artist himself, “abominably bad,”
-and he was immediately superseded as illustrator
-by H. K. Browne, who was destined to be inseparably
-connected with the novelist’s work for so long
-a period. <span class="xxpn" id="p030">{30}</span></p>
-
-<p>This episode has been so often dwelt upon, and
-so exhaustively dealt with, that I shall not do
-much more than point out how those who have
-written on the subject have altogether missed
-what is perhaps the most important link in the
-whole chain of cir­cum­stances. So put to it, as I
-have said, were the publishers to get the new
-number out in time lest an expectant public should
-be disappointed, that they were forced to fix upon
-Seymour’s substitute <i>without consulting Dickens</i>.
-This was really the whole <i>crux</i> of the situation.
-The author only recognised the failure of the
-plates. He knew nothing of the difficulties under
-which Buss had laboured, and so naturally made
-no allowances, and knew of no reason why subsequent
-ones should be better. The plates unquestionably
-were poor, but we find from Mr.
-Buss’s own private MS., to which, by his son’s
-kindness, I have had access, that this was not by
-any means mainly the fault of the artist. He had
-previously had no experience in etching, and only
-undertook the work after much pressure, to
-accommodate the publishers. To quote from his
-own account: <span class="xxpn" id="p031">{31}</span></p>
-
-<div class="dctr02" id="f1.6">
-<img src="images/i030fp.jpg" width="585" height="800" alt="" />
-<div class="dcaption">
-The “Pickwick” suppressed plate: “The
-Cricket Match.”(<i>By R. W. Buss</i>)</div></div>
-
-<blockquote>
-<p>At Seymour’s death, Hall engaged me to il­lus­trate
-Charles Dickens’s <i>Pickwick</i>. I commenced practice, and
-worked hard, I may say day and night, for at least a month
-on etching, and I furnished the illus­tra­tions for <i>Pickwick</i>.
-Without any reason assigned, Hall broke his engagement
-with me, in a manner at once unjust and unhandsome.</p></blockquote>
-
-<p>As a matter of fact, the plates, as they
-appeared, were not etched by Buss at all, but by
-a professional etcher after his designs. And it is
-curious to note that each of the plates is, not­with­stand­ing,
-inscribed, “Drawn &amp; Etch’d by R. W.
-Buss.”</p>
-
-<p>The artist’s bitterness against his employers was
-not unnatural. At the same time, we must remember
-that the fact that they had on the spur
-of the moment to decide upon an artist, without
-consulting Dickens, puts the matter in a very
-different light. The fortunes of the venture were
-at stake. The author, at all hazards, must be
-humoured. His will was paramount, and when
-he insisted upon Buss’s supersession by H. K.
-Browne, there was practically an end of the
-matter. Happily Buss’s labour was not all
-lost, and it was with much pleasure that I seized
-the opportunity offered me by the editor of the
-<span class="xxpn" id="p032">{32}</span>
-<i>Magazine of Art</i> in June 1902, to point out in
-that pub­li­ca­tion how perverse has been the fate
-which has made the name of an artist of no mean
-order more familiar by his few failures than by his
-many successes. It is not generally known that
-there are in existence two etched plates by Buss
-showing that he contemplated a series of extra
-illus­tra­tions to <i>Pickwick</i>. The one is a title-page
-with Mr. Pickwick being crowned; the other is
-rather a poor rendering of “The Break-down.”</p>
-
-<p>But to return to the plates themselves: only
-about seven hundred copies were published when
-plates by Browne were substituted for them.
-“The Cricket Match” was wholly suppressed, and
-the subject of “Tupman and Rachel” was etched
-over again, considerably altered, but evidently
-founded upon the Buss plate. The latter is here
-reproduced for the purpose of comparison.</p>
-
-<div class="dctr02" id="f1.7">
-<img src="images/i032fp.jpg" width="600" height="721" alt="" />
-<div class="dcaption">The “Pickwick” suppressed plate “Tupman and
-Rachel.”(<i>By R. W. Buss</i>)</div></div>
-
-<div class="dctr02" id="f1.8">
-<img src="images/i033fp.jpg" width="600" height="795" alt="" />
-<div class="dcaption">“Tupman and Rachel.”
-(<i>By H. K. Browne</i>)</div></div>
-
-<p>That every Dickens collector desires to possess
-one of the seven hundred copies of the first issue
-of the first edition which contain the Buss plates,
-is a matter of course, and enough has been said to
-make clear the reason of such desire. Should
-any of my readers fail to sympathise, he must take
-<span class="xxpn" id="p033">{33}</span>
-it as an incontrovertible sign that he is immune from
-that most delightful of all diseases, bibliomania.</p>
-
-<p>It need only be added that, in the beautiful
-“Victorian Edition” of the novel, published in two
-volumes by Messrs. Chapman and Hall in 1887,
-facsimiles may be seen of the original drawings
-made for the suppressed plates, as well as two
-unpublished drawings prepared by Mr. Buss, but
-not used. The subjects of these are “Mr.
-Pickwick at the Review,” and “Mr. Wardle and
-his Friends under the Influence of the Salmon.”
-The first is an excellent drawing, and goes far to
-prove that, had Buss been given time, he would
-have no more failed as illustrator of <i>Pickwick</i>
-than he did as illustrator of various other most
-successful pub­li­ca­tions. The same edition also
-contains facsimiles of an unused drawing by
-“Phiz,” “Mr. Winkle’s First Shot,” and of a
-water-colour drawing of “Tom Smart and the
-Chair,” sent in to the publishers by John Leech
-as a specimen of his work. From which it will
-be seen that the “Victorian Edition,” limited to
-two thousand copies, is also one which every
-Dickens lover ought, if possible, to possess.
-<span class="xxpn" id="p034">{34}</span></p>
-
-<p>The originals of the Buss drawings were in the
-possession of the artist’s daughter, Miss Frances
-Mary Buss, the well-known founder of the North
-London Collegiate and Camden Schools, until her
-death a few years ago. They were then sold, and
-I have been unable to discover into whose hands
-they have passed.</p>
-
-<p>So much for the <i>Pickwick</i> suppressed plates,
-which, if strict chronology were to be observed,
-should naturally be followed by an account of the
-“Rose Maylie and Oliver” plates in <i>Oliver Twist</i>.
-These, however, we shall hold over for another
-chapter, as they will have to be considered at some
-length. Meanwhile, we will deal shortly with the
-curious wood engraving in <i>The Battle of Life</i>,
-and with the etching of “The Last Song” in
-<i>The Memoirs of Joseph Grimaldi</i>. The former
-is so far germane to our subject that it should
-have been suppressed, but, out of con­sid­er­ation
-for the artist, was not.</p>
-
-<div class="dctr04" id="f2.2">
-<img src="images/i035.jpg" width="473" height="800" alt="" />
-<div class="dcaption">The Battle of Life.
-“Leech’s grave mistake”</div></div>
-
-<p>Every Dickens collector desires to possess the
-complete set of the “Christmas Books” in their
-dainty red cloth bindings, dated from 1843 to
-1848. A really desirable set includes, of course,
-<span class="xxpn" id="p036">{36}</span>
-the <i>Christmas Carol</i>,<a class="afnanc" href="#fn11" id="fnanc11">11</a>
-with coloured plates by
-Leech, with the <i>green end-papers</i> and “stave 1”;
-<i>The Chimes</i>, with the publishers’ names <i>within</i>
-the engraved part of the title-page; and <i>The
-Battle of Life</i>, with the publishers’ names on <i>both</i>
-titles. But it is only the last of these that is
-entitled to mention in a treatise on cancelled
-illus­tra­tions, and that, as I have said, not because
-it <i>was</i> suppressed, but because it should have been.</p>
-
-<div class="dftnt">
-<p class="pfirst"><a class="afnlabel" href="#fnanc11" id="fn11">11</a>
-It may be mentioned that there are two or three copies of the
-<i>Christmas Carol</i> known with the title-page and half-title printed in
-green and red, instead of in red and blue. Much store is laid by this
-variation amongst really moonstruck collectors.</p></div>
-
-<p>By those who are familiar with the story it
-will be remembered that an early part of the plot
-leads one to suppose that Marion Jeddler had
-eloped with Michael Warden, when, as a matter
-of fact, she had merely escaped to her aunt.
-Leech, who was engaged as illustrator, was
-immensely busy, and only read so much of the
-story as seemed necessary for his purpose. As a
-result he was deceived, as Dickens intended his
-readers should be, and designed the double illus­tra­tion
-here reproduced, in which the festivities to
-welcome the bridegroom at the top
-of the page <span class="xxpn" id="p037">{37}</span>
-contrast with the flight of the bride in company
-with Michael Warden represented below. Thus
-was Dickens curiously “hoist with his own
-petard.” And the curious thing is that, not­with­stand­ing
-the publicity given to the mistake in
-Forster’s <i>Life of Dickens</i>, this tragic woodcut,
-which wrongs poor Marion’s innocence and makes
-a hash of the whole story, is reproduced in the
-reprints up to this very day. The poor girl’s
-tragic figure remains, and seems likely to continue
-to do so, a victim to the stereotype.</p>
-
-<p>This episode is generally referred to as “Leech’s
-grave mistake,” and grave undoubtedly it was;
-but the matter has its bright side, which redounds
-to the credit of the great novelist. I take the
-liberty of quoting from what has always seemed
-to me a very noble letter when we remember that
-Dickens was of all men most sensitive to any
-shortcomings in the work of his collaborators.
-He writes to Forster:</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-<p>When I first saw it it was with a horror and agony not
-to be expressed. Of course I need not tell <i>you</i>, my dear
-fellow, Warden has no business in the elopement scene. <i>He</i>
-was never there. In the first hot sweat of this surprise and
-novelty I was going to implore the printing of that sheet to
-<span class="xxpn" id="p038">{38}</span>
-be stopped, and the figure taken out of the block. But
-when I thought of the pain that this might give to our kind-hearted
-Leech, and that what is such a monstrous enormity
-to me, as never having entered my brain, may not so present
-itself to others, I became more composed, though the fact is
-wonderful to me.</p></blockquote>
-
-<p>Of course, had it been in these days of hurried
-pub­li­ca­tion, Dickens would hardly have given the
-matter a second thought. The average illustrator
-of to-day is curiously superior to the requirements
-of his author. He either does not read the episodes
-that he is called upon to il­lus­trate, or, if he reads
-them, he does not grasp their meaning, or, if he
-grasps their meaning, the meaning does not meet
-with his approval. At any rate, he constantly
-makes a hash of the whole thing. Take for
-example <i>Penelope’s English Experiences</i>, by Miss
-Kate Wiggin, now lying before me. Look at the
-illus­tra­tion, opposite p. 58, of Lady de Wolfe’s
-butler, who struck terror into Penelope’s soul
-because <i>he did not wear a livery</i>, and try, if you
-can, to recognise him in the shoulder-knotted,
-stripe-waistcoated, plush-breeched, silk-stockinged
-menial with an “unapproachable haughtiness of
-demeanour,” which the illustrator has portrayed.
-<span class="xxpn" id="p039">{39}</span>
-Nor is this one of a few exceptional cases: their
-number might be multiplied <i>ad infinitum</i>.</p>
-
-<p>But to return to <i>The Battle of Life</i>. Curiously
-enough, there is another little episode connected
-with this book, never, I believe, noticed before,
-which accentuates our impression of the generosity
-of Dickens’s character.</p>
-
-<p>Three years after its pub­li­ca­tion a somewhat
-scurrilous little volume (now excessively rare),
-bearing the allusive title <i>The Battle of London
-Life; or Boz and his Secretary</i>, issued from the
-press. It was il­lus­trat­ed by six lithographs signed
-with the name of George Augustus Sala. It was
-a poor enough performance, but attracted attention
-by its <i>ad captandum</i> title, and the portrait of “Boz
-in his Study.” It is an imaginary and far from
-complimentary account of Dickens’s employment
-of a secretary, whose occupation it is to show him
-round the haunts of vice in London, by way of
-providing “local colour” for the novels. Eventually
-the secretary turns out to be a detective, who has
-been told off by the Government to discover
-the nature of the novelist’s intimacy with the
-revolutionist, Mazzini. It is a vulgar little
-<span class="xxpn" id="p040">{40}</span>
-brochure, and, for all its futility, must have been
-very distasteful to the idol of the day. It was
-therefore the more magnanimous of Dickens to
-ignore the part which Sala had in it, and to speak
-so generously of him as we find him doing in the
-<i>Life</i>, besides employing him and pushing him,
-as he did largely later on, in his periodicals. A
-smaller man would not have allowed himself to
-forget such youthful indiscretions, for “memory
-always obeys the commands of the heart.”</p>
-
-<p>Judged as a work of art, <i>The Battle of Life</i> is
-perhaps the least successful of Dickens’s “Christmas
-Books.” Edward FitzGerald’s opinion of it was
-shown in an autograph letter which came into the
-market only the other day. “What a wretched
-affair is <i>The Battle of Life</i>!” he writes; “it scarce
-even has the few good touches that generally
-redeem Dickens.”</p>
-
-<div class="dctr03" id="f1.9">
-<img src="images/i040fp.jpg" width="585" height="800" alt="" />
-<div class="dcaption">“The Last Song” with the suppressed border.
-(<i>By George Cruikshank</i>)</div></div>
-
-<p>Whilst we are on the subject of an illus­tra­tion
-which should have been suppressed but was not,
-it should be pointed out that this was not the
-only occasion upon which Leech misunderstood
-Dickens’s purport. This we learn from Mr.
-F. G. Kitton’s monumental work,
-<i>Dickens and <span class="xxpn" id="p041">{41}</span>
-his Illustrators</i>. Here he tells us that in another
-Christmas book, <i>The Chimes</i>, Leech delineated,
-in place of Richard as described in the text, an
-extremely ragged and dissipated-looking character,
-with a battered hat upon his head. When the
-novelist saw it the drawing had already been
-engraved, but the woodcut was promptly suppressed;
-there still exists, however, an impression
-of the cancelled engraving, which is bound up with
-what is evidently a unique copy of <i>The Chimes</i>
-(now the property of Mr. J. P. Dexter), where
-blank spaces are left for some of the woodcuts.
-This particular copy is probably the publishers’
-“make-up,” which had accidentally left their hands.</p>
-
-<p>Let us now consider for a moment a very
-remarkable etching which was, so far only as
-regards an important portion of it, cancelled in
-all but the very first issue of <i>The Memoirs of
-Joseph Grimaldi</i>. These were published in two
-volumes in 1838. Besides writing the preface,
-Dickens was only responsible for the editing of
-Mr. Egerton Wilks’s manuscript, which had been
-prepared from autobiographical notes. A good
-deal of fault was found with
-the work, particularly <span class="xxpn" id="p042">{42}</span>
-on the ground that Dickens himself could never
-have seen Grimaldi. To this he very pertinently
-replied, “I don’t believe that Lord Braybrooke
-had more than the very slightest acquaintance
-with Mr. Pepys, whose memoirs he edited two
-centuries after he died!”<a class="afnanc" href="#fn12" id="fnanc12">12</a></p>
-
-<p>The volumes are now most valued for the
-twelve etchings by George Cruikshank; but the
-important thing from the bibliolater’s point of
-view is to possess the earliest issue with “The Last
-Song” <i>surrounded by a grotesque border</i>. This
-border, which is here produced, was removed
-from the plate after the first issue of the first
-edition. I have just had offered to me a copy
-of this edition containing “The Last Song” <i>in the
-two states</i>, <i>i.e.</i> with and without the border, for
-the modest sum
-of eight guineas!</p>
-
-<div class="dftnt">
-<p class="pfirst"><a class="afnlabel" href="#fnanc12" id="fn12">12</a>
-My attention was lately called to a copy
-of the memoirs in which the former owner had pasted the
-following amusingly irrelevant note:—“At the Beckford
-sale a copy of the famous Grimm—the Grimm with the
-illus­tra­tions printed in bronze-coloured ink—fetched £64.”
-I have a very shrewd suspicion that the annotator had an
-un­me­thod­i­cal brain, and believed Grimm to be short for
-Grimaldi! <i>Requiescat in pace.</i></p></div>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="h2herein" id="p043">CHAPTER IV
-<span class="h2small">DICKENS CANCELLED PLATES: “OLIVER TWIST,”
- “MARTIN CHUZZLEWIT,” “THE STRANGE GENTLEMAN,” “PICTURES FROM ITALY,”
- AND “SKETCHES BY BOZ.”</span></h2></div>
-
-<p class="pfirst"><span class="smcap">I<b>N</b></span>
-dealing with the episode of the suppressed plate
-in <i>Oliver Twist</i> we must be careful to bear in mind
-the fact that between the pub­li­ca­tion of <i>Pickwick</i>
-and the later novel there was an essential difference.
-The former was first published in self-contained
-parts, whereas the latter was published <i>serially</i> in
-<i>Bentley’s Miscellany</i>. Hence, the first editions of
-<i>Pickwick</i> in book form are to be met with bound
-from the parts, whereas the first editions in book-form
-of <i>Oliver Twist</i> are only to be found as
-issued by the publishers complete in three volumes.
-And unless we grasp this distinction at the outset
-we shall find it impossible to understand the
-apparently erratic appearance and disappearance
-<span class="xxpn" id="p044">{44}</span>
-of the suppressed plate of “Rose Maylie and
-Oliver: the Fireside Scene” and its substitute.</p>
-
-<p>The first instalment of the novel was published
-in the second number of <i>Bentley’s Miscellany</i>,
-February 1837, and it continued to run for nearly
-two years and a quarter. From this it will be
-seen that the last instalment of the novel was not
-published until three months of the year 1839 had
-elapsed.</p>
-
-<p>In the meantime, however, the novel and the
-illus­tra­tions had been completed, and the whole
-story was printed in book form and published in
-three volumes in the second year of its serial issue,
-the exact date being November 9, 1838.</p>
-
-<p>As a consequence we shall find the following
-curious result—namely, that the owners of the
-very earliest issue of <i>Oliver Twist</i> find themselves
-not in the happy possession of the suppressed
-plate, as would be naturally expected, but in the
-melancholy possession of its exceedingly ugly
-substitute.</p>
-
-<p>This, to the uninitiated, would prove as great
-a puzzle as to Macaulay’s New Zealander would
-appear the fact that in Truro Cathedral the older
-<span class="xxpn" id="p045">{45}</span>
-structure is of a later style than the new. But
-this is comparing small things with great. For we
-are fain to confess that, unlike the law, <i>de minimis
-curat helluo librorum</i>.</p>
-
-<p>Thus, then, we have to face this apparent
-anomaly, that, to possess a copy of <i>Oliver Twist</i>
-with brightest impressions of the etchings throughout,
-we are under the necessity of combining the
-early plates from <i>Bentley’s Miscellany</i> with the
-later plates from the first edition published in
-volume form. This not uninteresting fact I may,
-I believe, claim to be the first to point out, and
-it goes far to explain a very misleading note on
-p. 151 of Reid’s monumental <i>Catalogue of George
-Cruikshank’s Works</i>, which shows clearly that
-the late Keeper of the Prints was greatly at sea
-in the matter.</p>
-
-<p>Referring to the “Fireside Scene,” he says:
-“The plate was used in 1838, when the work reappeared
-in three volumes, in lieu of the preceding
-(‘Rose Maylie and Oliver at Agnes’s Tomb’),
-which was thought by the publisher to be of too
-melancholy a nature for the conclusion of the
-story.” From which any casual reader would be
-<span class="xxpn" id="p046">{46}</span>
-led to the conclusion that “Rose Maylie and
-Oliver at the Tomb” was the suppressed plate,
-and that the “Fireside Scene” was substituted
-for it, whereas exactly the opposite was the case.</p>
-
-<p>The novel was ready for pub­li­ca­tion complete
-in three volumes in the autumn of 1838. The
-illus­tra­tions for the last volume had been somewhat
-hastily executed “in a lump.” And Dickens,
-who always was most solicitous about the work of
-his collaborating artists, did not set eyes upon
-them until the eve of pub­li­ca­tion. One of them,
-“The Fireside Scene,” he so strongly objected to
-that it had to be cancelled, and he wrote to the
-artist asking him to design “the plate afresh and
-to do so <i>at once</i>, in order that as few impressions
-as possible of the present one may go forth.”<a class="afnanc" href="#fn13" id="fnanc13">13</a>
-The pub­li­ca­tion of the book, however, could not
-be delayed, and thus we have it that the earliest
-issue of the first edition of <i>Oliver Twist</i> in book-form
-contains the “Fireside Scene” opposite p. 313,
-vol. iii., which it is the desire of every Dickens
-collector to possess, while the later issue of the
-latter part of the novel
-in <i>Bentley’s Miscellany</i> <span class="xxpn" id="p047">{47}</span>
-contains that which Cruikshank substituted for it
-at the novelist’s request.</p>
-
-<p>Both the plates are here reproduced for the
-convenience of the owner of this or that edition.</p>
-
-<p>But this is not all that has to be said upon the
-subject of the “Rose and Oliver” plates, and
-again I claim to be the purveyor of a little exclusive
-information.<a class="afnanc" href="#fn14" id="fnanc14">14</a></p>
-
-<p>It has generally been supposed that Cruikshank,
-although naturally put about by Dickens’s disapproval,
-did immediately proceed to carry out his
-author’s suggestion. For example, we find Mr.
-Francis Phillimore, in his introduction to the
-<i>Dickens Memento</i>, published by Messrs. Field and
-Tuer, saying: “The author was so disgusted with
-the last plate that he politely but forcibly asked
-Cruikshank to etch another. This was done at
-once.” I am, however, in a position to prove that
-this was emphatically not the case. And it is
-what one would naturally expect, for George was
-the last person in the world to acquiesce calmly
-and unhesitatingly in the condemnation of work
-which he had himself
-deemed sufficiently good. <span class="xxpn" id="p048">{48}</span></p>
-
-<p>In the year 1892 I had the privilege of examining
-the splendid collection of Mr. H. W. Bruton,
-of Gloucester, which has since been dispersed.
-On that occasion he drew my attention to a
-unique impression of the “Fireside” plate in his
-possession, from which we (he was the first to see
-the point) drew the necessary conclusion which
-follows. The importance of the impression lies in
-the fact that it shows that a large amount of
-added work had been put into the plate, principally
-of a stipply nature, after all the impressions
-which had so displeased Dickens had been struck
-off. By which it is evident that George tried
-hard to improve the original plate instead of at
-once falling in with the suggestion that the subject
-should be designed afresh. This proof was probably
-submitted to Dickens and again rejected, for
-no impressions of the plate with stippled additions
-are known to have been published.<a class="afnanc" href="#fn15" id="fnanc15">15</a>
-And
-plainly it was only after considerable effort to
-make the plate do, that the
-artist designed the <span class="xxpn" id="p049">{49}</span>
-far worse picture of “Rose Maylie and Oliver
-before the Tomb of Agnes,” which is a questionable
-adornment to the later issues of the story.
-And had it not been for the delay so caused, it is
-more than probable that the suppressed plate
-would have been even a greater rarity than it
-actually is.</p>
-
-<div class="dftnt">
-<p class="pfirst"><a class="afnlabel" href="#fnanc13" id="fn13">13</a>
-<i>Vide</i> Forster, <i>Life of Charles Dickens</i>,
-vol. i. p. 101. (Library Edition.)</p>
-
-<p class="pfirst padtopc"><a class="afnlabel" href="#fnanc14" id="fn14">14</a>
-I first alluded to this in <i>Temple Bar</i> for September 1892.</p>
-
-<p class="pfirst padtopc"><a class="afnlabel" href="#fnanc15" id="fn15">15</a>
-It need hardly be said that if any of my readers finds that his
-copy contains “The Fireside Scene” differing from the first of those
-here produced, he may congratulate himself on the possession of a
-great rarity.</p></div>
-
-<div class="dctr01" id="f1.10">
-<img src="images/i048fp.jpg" width="800" height="481" alt="" />
-<div class="dcaption">
-<table class="caption-table" summary="">
-<tr>
- <td>The suppressed plate from “Oliver Twist”:
- “The Fireside Scene”</td>
- <td>The suppressed plate from “Oliver Twist”:
- “The Fireside Scene,” as worked upon by
- Cruikshank</td></tr></table>
-</div></div>
-
-<p>As I have said above, Mr. Bruton’s collection
-was dispersed in 1897 at Sotheby’s. No. 145 in
-that sale was an unrivalled run of the <i>Oliver Twist</i>
-illus­tra­tions, seeing that it consisted of a complete
-set of proofs of the etchings, and included, with
-other rarities, the unique proof just mentioned.
-The lot sold for £32:10s. By the kindness of its
-late owner, I am enabled to present to my readers
-a re­pro­duc­tion of this unique impression of the
-plate in its second state.</p>
-
-<p>So much then for the story of the suppressed
-plate. There is, however, something more to be
-said of its substitute.</p>
-
-<p>If we turn to our edition of <i>Oliver Twist</i>, so
-long as it does not happen to be one published
-subsequently to 1845, or one containing the suppressed
-plate, we shall find Rose standing with her <span class="xxpn" id="p050">{50}</span>
-arm on Oliver’s shoulder before a tablet put up to
-his mother’s memory, and we shall find that Rose’s
-dress is light in colour save for a dark shawl or
-lace fichu, which is thrown across her shoulders
-and bosom. In the 1846 edition of the book, the
-plate has been largely touched up and shaded, and
-Rose’s dress turned into a black one.<a class="afnanc" href="#fn16" id="fnanc16">16</a>
-Now, it is
-perfectly evident that it is the old plate altered
-and used over again and not a new plate copied
-from the old, for every line and every dot in the
-illus­tra­tion to the earlier editions reappears in this.
-The perplexing matter that I have to draw your
-attention to, however, is that, in the same lot (145)
-at the Bruton sale mentioned above, there was
-sold a proof of this plate with Rose Maylie in the
-black dress, and this <i>a proof before letters</i>, an impossible
-nut for the amateur to crack who does not
-know that the lettering of plates may be stopped-out
-or burnished away or covered up for the striking
-off of misleading impressions; from which the
-moral may be drawn that it is better to believe in
-proof impressions after letters where
-they are well <span class="xxpn" id="p052">{52}</span>
-authenticated, than to presume that a proof is
-before letters merely because those letters do not
-appear. <i>Verb. sat sap.</i> The plate in this state is
-here reproduced for the sake of comparison.</p>
-
-<div class="dctr01" id="f2.3">
-<img src="images/i051.jpg" width="800" height="506" alt="" />
-<div class="dcaption">
-<table class="caption-table" summary="">
-<tr>
- <td><p class="pcenter"><small><i>The plate in its
- first state.</i></small></p></td>
- <td><p class="pcenter"><small><i>The plate in its
- second state.</i></small></p></td></tr>
-<tr>
- <td colspan="2"><p class="pcenter padtopc">Rose Maylie and Oliver
- at Agnes’s Tomb. (<i>The substituted plate in two
- states</i>)</p></td></tr></table>
-</div></div>
-
-<div class="dftnt">
-<p class="pfirst"><a class="afnlabel" href="#fnanc16" id="fn16">16</a>
-The dress is also black in a reprint of the
-first edition published by Messrs. Macmillan in 1892, and
-in the large edition with the illus­tra­tions coloured,
-published by Messrs. Chapman and Hall in 1895.</p></div>
-
-<p>Before
-passing from <i>Oliver Twist</i>, it should
-be pointed out that the first issue of 1838, which
-contains the suppressed plate, is also differentiated
-from the second issue of the same year by what
-is sometimes alluded to as the “suppressed title-page,”
-which runs as follows:—“Oliver Twist; /
-or, the / ‘Parish Boy’s Pro­gress;’ / by ‘Boz,’ / in
-three vol­umes, / Vol. I (II. or III.) / Lon­don: /
-Richard Bent­ley, New Bur­ling­ton Street. /&#x202f;—&#x202f;—&#x202f;/
-1838.”</p>
-
-<p>The second issue, with the substituted plate,
-has:—“Oliver Twist / By / Charles Dickens, /
-Author of ‘The Pick­wick Pa­pers,’” the rest of
-the title being as in the first. It is curious to
-notice, further, that in a later edition the original
-title is resumed.</p>
-
-<p>So much for <i>Oliver Twist</i>. We must not,
-however, quit Dickens without mentioning one or
-two other items, which more or less of right find
-their place in a treatise on “Suppressed Plates.”
-<span class="xxpn" id="p053">{53}</span></p>
-
-<p>There is, for example, the etched title-page to
-the first issue of the first edition of <i>Martin
-Chuzzlewit</i>, where the reward on the direction post
-appears as “100£” instead of “£100,” which is
-often wrongly labelled “suppressed.” As a matter
-of fact it was not suppressed at all. It is nothing
-more than the <i>first state</i> of a plate which was afterwards
-altered. However, the bait is so valuable
-a one with which to entice the bibliomaniac, that
-there is no prospect of the description being lightly
-relinquished, and as it is one object of this treatise
-to protect the unwary, allusion to it is not out of
-place. The fact that it is the title-page issued
-after the book had appeared serially with its forty
-illus­tra­tions, disposes of any lingering idea that in
-acquiring it we are assured of the possession of
-early impressions of the other plates. But the
-undiscriminating bibliomaniac requires no logical
-justification, and the plate will still retain its
-market value.</p>
-
-<p>A like variation is to be found in a well-known
-etching by George Cruikshank, entitled “The
-Worship of Wealth.” The head of Mammon is
-represented by a small
-money-bag, and the <span class="xxpn" id="p054">{54}</span>
-features of the face by the letters GOLD. Of
-this plate only one state was known until in a
-happy moment one of our best-known collectors
-discovered and secured a unique proof with all the
-letters printed in reverse,
-<span class="nowrap">thus:—</span></p>
-
-<div class="dctr09">
-<img src="images/i054.png" width="192" height="114" alt="" /></div>
-
-<p class="pcontinue">—a triumph
-which only the true <i>dilettante</i> will
-appreciate at its proper value.</p>
-
-<p>Another variation of the same kind is to be
-found in the first and second issues of Pine’s
-beautiful edition of Horace (1733), in which the
-text is engraved throughout. In the first there is
-the misprint “Post est” on the medal of Cæsar.
-In the second “Potest” has been substituted.
-Copies containing the mistake fetch twice as much
-in the market as those containing the correction!
-This is, however, justifiable, as the mistake connotes
-an early set of impressions.</p>
-
-<div class="dctr03" id="f2.4">
-<img src="images/i055.jpg" width="573" height="800" alt="" />
-<div class="dcaption">The Strange Gentleman</div></div>
-
-<p>Another Dickens plate demanding mention is
-the exceedingly rare etched frontispiece by “Phiz,”
-to be found in only a few copies of
-<i>The Strange <span class="xxpn" id="p055">{55}</span>
-Gentleman</i>, published in 1837 by Messrs. Chapman
-and Hall. This “Comic Burletta” was founded
-upon “The Great Winglebury Duel,” in <i>Sketches
-by Boz</i>, and was first performed at the St. James’s
-Theatre in September 1836.
-A second edition was <span class="xxpn" id="p056">{56}</span>
-published in 1860 with a coloured etching by Mr.
-F. W. Pailthorpe, the last illustrator to carry on
-the tradition of Cruikshank and H. K. Browne.
-The “Phiz” etching is here reproduced. Even the
-second edition is extremely rare, and readily sells
-for between two and three pounds. The reason
-for the disappearance of the “Phiz” plate is not
-known, and I only give particulars of it here
-because of its excessive rarity, and because it is
-constantly referred to as “suppressed,” though
-with no strict justification. The British Museum
-copy of the book only contains Mr. Pailthorpe’s
-frontispiece, but a copy with the “Phiz” plate
-is to be found in the Forster Library, South
-Kensington.</p>
-
-<p>Then, again, we have Dickens’s <i>Pictures from
-Italy</i>, published by Messrs. Bradbury and Evans
-in 1846, with the beautiful “vignette illus­tra­tions
-on the wood,” by that master engraver, Samuel
-Palmer. For some reason or other that representing
-“The Street of the Tombs, Pompeii,” on the
-title-page, disappears after the exhaustion of the
-first and second editions, both published in the
-same year. It reappears, however,
-in the late <span class="xxpn" id="p057">{57}</span>
-reprint of 1888, and is also only here alluded to
-because sometimes referred to as “suppressed.”</p>
-
-<div class="dctr03" id="f1.11">
-<img src="images/i056fp.jpg" width="591" height="800" alt="" />
-<div class="dcaption">The suppressed plate from
-“Sketches by Boz”</div></div>
-
-<p>The last of the Dickens illus­tra­tions germane to
-our subject is that much-desired etching of “The
-Free and Easy,” which should be found opposite
-page 29 of the “second series” of <i>Sketches by Boz</i>.
-Both the first and second series were originally
-published in 1836. In 1839 another edition
-appeared with all the etchings to the original
-edition enlarged (except “The Free and Easy,”
-which was cancelled), and with thirteen additional
-plates. An edition on the lines of the first issue of
-the second series, only with the illus­tra­tions in
-lithography, was published in Calcutta in 1837.</p>
-
-<p>It is important, in collating the first editions of
-the <i>Sketches</i>, to bear in mind the fact that the
-first series was in two volumes and the second in
-one. Otherwise it is impossible to understand
-why “Vol. III.” is engraved on each of the plates
-in the second series. As showing how eagerly
-these volumes in fine condition, and of course
-uncut and in the original cloth binding, are sought
-after, it may be mentioned that thirty pounds is by
-no means an unheard-of price. <span class="xxpn" id="p058">{58}</span></p>
-
-<p>Unfortunately the plates will in most cases be
-found to be badly foxed. The tissue of the paper
-itself has in many cases been attacked by damp
-and rotted right through.</p>
-
-<p>In such cases any remedy except the drastic
-one of punching is of course out of the question.
-Hence the rarity of a really “desirable” set of the
-plates,—a rarity which is largely due to the hoarding
-away of books in glass cases; for books require
-fresh, dry air, with the rest of God’s creatures.</p>
-
-<p>It may not be out of place here, whilst on the
-subject of foxing, to warn the collector that every
-plate in a book should be carefully examined
-before any extravagant price is given for what is
-called a fine copy. No doubt we are much
-indebted to the clever “doctors” of prints who
-punch the fatal spots out and pulp them in, who
-fill up the worm-holes and vamp up the cleaned
-prints with green-wood smoke and coffee infusions
-to a respectable appearance of age. At the same
-time we must never allow ourselves to forget
-that there are such occupations as vamping and
-“improving,” and that it is not for vamped and
-improved copies that we should pay excessive prices.</p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="h2herein" id="p059">CHAPTER V
-<span class="h2small">
-ON SOME FURTHER SUPPRESSED PLATES, ETCHINGS,
-AND WOOD ENGRAVINGS BY GEORGE CRUIKSHANK</span></h2></div>
-
-<p class="pfirst"><span class="smcap">I<b>N</b></span>
-Chapter III. we have incidentally considered
-the suppressed grotesque border to the etching of
-“The Last Song” by George Cruikshank in the
-<i>Memoirs of Joseph Grimaldi</i>. In this chapter
-we shall treat of certain other sup­pres­sions to
-which the “inimitable” George’s work was subjected.</p>
-
-<p>The first to which I shall direct your attention
-has a curious and romantic history attaching to it,
-instinct with the rough and brutal methods of our
-immediate ancestors. It is a highly-coloured etched
-broadside published in 1815, the very year of the
-tragic death of the gifted and ill-fated Gillray,
-whose mantle, as political caricaturist, was now
-fallen upon his brilliant
-young contemporary. <span class="xxpn" id="p060">{60}</span>
-These were the days of hard hitting, of reckless
-charges, of imprisonment for libel, of dramatic
-political episodes, and the wonder is that George
-Cruikshank escaped the fates of the Burdetts, the
-Hones, and the Hobhouses of the period. The fact
-is that George was a very shrewd young man and
-had a very shrewd idea of how far it was safe to
-go. Indeed, in this partially suppressed cartoon
-we find him upon the very verge of recklessness
-and only drawing back from danger just in the nick
-of time.</p>
-
-<p>I have spoken of the <i>partial</i> sup­pres­sion of this
-broadside, and in this <i>partial</i> cancellation it is
-differentiated from all others with which we have
-hitherto dealt. Brutal enough as is the satire as
-we see it, there is a brutality curiously hidden
-within, which, unsuspected by the uninitiated,
-proves to what astounding lengths satire of that
-period was sometimes ready to go.</p>
-
-<p>Before dealing in detail with this “Financial
-Survey of Cumberland or the Beggar’s Petition”
-it will be as well to relate the cir­cum­stances which
-led up to its perpetration.</p>
-
-<p>Ernest Augustus, Duke of
-Cumberland, born <span class="xxpn" id="p061">{61}</span>
-1771, was perhaps the best hated of all the royal
-personages of the period then in England, and this
-not­with­stand­ing the fact that he was a man of
-conspicuous bravery. He was, for a few years
-after Queen Victoria’s accession, next heir to the
-throne of England. Later he ascended the throne
-of Hanover under the regulations of the Salic law,
-and gained the affection of his people, proving
-himself a wise and beneficent ruler. Probably
-William IV. put his character into a nutshell
-when he said: “Ernest is not such a bad fellow,
-but if any one has a corn he is sure to tread on it.”</p>
-
-<p>However that may be, there is no doubt that
-there is hardly a crime in the whole decalogue
-which was not at one time or another laid at his
-door, and not the least among these was the crime
-of murder.</p>
-
-<p>To quote the succinct account of this affair
-given in the <i>Dictionary of National Biography</i>:—“On
-the night of 31st May 1810 the duke was
-found in his apartments in St. James’s Palace with
-a terrible wound in his head, which would have
-been mortal had not the assassin’s weapon struck
-against the duke’s sword. Shortly
-afterwards his <span class="xxpn" id="p062">{62}</span>
-valet, Sellis,<a class="afnanc" href="#fn17" id="fnanc17">17</a>
-was found dead in his bed with his
-throat cut. On hearing the evidence of the
-surgeons and other witnesses, the coroner’s jury
-returned a verdict that Sellis had committed suicide
-after attempting to assassinate the duke. The
-absence of any reasonable motive... caused this
-event to be greatly discussed, and democratic
-journalists did not hesitate to hint that he really
-murdered Sellis.” One of these, Henry White,
-was sentenced in 1815 to fifteen months’ imprisonment
-and a fine of £200 for publishing the rumour.
-The story again cropped up in 1832, when the
-duke had made himself particularly obnoxious to
-the radical press, and was exploited by a pamphleteer
-named Phillips. The duke prosecuted him, and he
-was promptly found guilty and sentenced to six
-months’ imprisonment.</p>
-
-<div class="dftnt">
-<p class="pfirst"><a class="afnlabel" href="#fnanc17" id="fn17">17</a>
-Not Serres, as Reid has it in his descriptive account of Cruikshank’s
-works. The keeper of the prints evidently confused the name
-of the valet with that of Mrs. Olive Serres, who later on called herself
-Princess Olive of Cumberland, and claimed to be the duke’s legitimate
-daughter.</p></div>
-
-<p>Not­with­stand­ing this, there was little abatement
-in the persecution of the duke. Even Lord
-Brougham in the House of
-Lords sneeringly called <span class="xxpn" id="p063">{63}</span>
-him to his face “the illustrious duke—illustrious
-only by courtesy.” I take up a few consecutive
-numbers of that venomous little contemporary
-paper, <i>Figaro in London</i>, and find week by week
-some very plain speaking. Here are a few
-examples:—</p>
-
-<div class="dpoemctr"><div class="dstanzactr">
-<span class="spquoteverse"><span class="spquoteblock">“</span>That
- he’s ne’er known to change his mind</span>
-<span class="spp01">Is surely nothing strange;</span>
-<span class="spp00">For no one ever yet could find</span>
-<span class="spp01">He’d any mind to change.”</span>
-</div></div>
-
-<p>Again:—</p>
-
-<div class="dpoemctr"><div class="dstanzactr">
-<span class="spquoteverse"><span class="spquoteblock">“</span>He
- boasts about the truth, I’ve heard,</span>
-<span class="spp01">And vows he’d never break it;</span>
-<span class="spp00">Why zounds a man <i>must</i> keep his word</span>
-<span class="spp01">When nobody will take it.”</span>
-</div></div>
-
-<p>Again, referring to a youth dressed <i>à la Prince
-de Cumberland</i>, who had been brought up at Bow
-Street charged with being an expert pickpocket,
-<i>Figaro</i> says: “A similarity to the Duke of
-Cumberland is a very serious matter, and in the
-opinion of Mr. Halls (the police magistrate) quite
-sufficient to entitle any one to a couple of months’
-imprisonment, as a common thief or an incorrigible
-vagabond.”</p>
-
-<p>Again:— <span class="xxpn" id="p064">{64}</span></p>
-
-<div class="dpoemctr">
-<div class="dstanzactr"><div>“INQUEST EXTRAORDINARY</div>
-<span class="spp00">Found dead of fright, a child, (how sad a case!)</span>
-<span class="spp00">Verdict—Saw Cumberland’s mustachioed face.”</span>
-</div></div>
-
-<p>Again:—“The new piece announced at Drury
-Lane under the title of <i>The Dæmon Duke</i> or <i>The
-Mystic Branch</i> has no reference whatever to his
-Royal Highness of Cumberland.”</p>
-
-<p>But these might be multiplied almost to infinity.
-The examples quoted make it sufficiently plain
-why it was that the Whig Cabinet of the day felt
-it advisable to hurry on our late Queen’s marriage.</p>
-
-<p>So much for a general review of the duke’s
-career. We will now return to the year 1815 and
-the pub­li­ca­tion of the broadside with which we are
-more particularly concerned.</p>
-
-<p>The duke had just announced his intention of
-marrying the Princess of Salm, who had been
-twice a widow. The Prince Regent had raised no
-objection, but the Queen, who had a rooted
-aversion to second marriages, made no secret of
-her disapproval. The country, too, was indignant,
-because another royal marriage spelt, in accordance
-with what was now the ordinary usage, a further
-burden upon the exchequer.</p>
-
-<div class="dbigpicture" id="f1.12">
-<div class="dctr01 dhtml">
-<img src="images/i064fp.png" width="1200" height="861" alt="" />
-<div class="dcaption">“A Financial Survey of Cumberland or the Beggars
- Petition.” (<i>From the only known uncoloured impression of the
- Plate</i>)</div></div>
-
-<div class="dctr03 dhandheld">
-<img src="images/i064fp-epubmobi.png" width="799" height="1113" alt="" />
-<div class="dcaption">“A Financial Survey of Cumberland or the Beggars
- Petition.” (<i>From the only known uncoloured impression of the
- Plate</i>)</div></div></div>
-
-<div class="dbigpicture" id="f1.13">
-<div class="dctr01 dhtml">
-<img src="images/i065fp.jpg" width="1200" height="852" alt="" />
-<div class="dcaption">“A Financial Survey of Cumberland or the Beggars
- Petition.” (<i>From a coloured impression of the plate, with the
- figure of the valet obliterated with lamp-black</i>)</div></div>
-
-<div class="dctr03 dhandheld">
-<img src="images/i065fp-epubmobi.jpg" width="799" height="1125" alt="" />
-<div class="dcaption">“A Financial Survey of Cumberland or the
- Beggars Petition.” (<i>From a coloured impression of the
- plate, with the figure of the valet obliterated with lamp-black</i>)
- </div></div></div><!--dbigpicture-->
-
-<div><span class="xxpn" id="p065">{65}</span></div>
-
-<p>On July 3 the proposal was made in the
-Commons to increase the duke’s pension of
-£18,000 a year, which he held in addition to his
-salary of £3000 a year as Colonel of the 1st
-Hussars, by £6000. The House was equally
-divided on the vote, when a dramatic incident
-occurred. Lord Cochrane, heir to the Dundonald
-peerage, and a member of the House of Commons,
-had, in the previous year, been wrongfully found
-guilty of participation in a Stock Exchange fraud
-and had been imprisoned. On this very 3rd day
-of July he was released from prison, and immediately
-repaired to Westminster. The House
-was at that moment going to a division. His
-lordship entered just in time to record his casting
-vote against the increase of the duke’s pension, and
-thus by an ex­traor­di­nary coincidence the duke was
-the poorer and the country the richer by £6000 a
-year.</p>
-
-<p>This is the moment seized by Cruikshank in the
-broadside here reproduced. Before the half-open
-door of “St. Stephen’s,” behind which is seen a
-crowd of members, Lord Cochrane fires, from a
-mortar decorated with a full-bottomed wig, a
-<span class="xxpn" id="p066">{66}</span>
-cannon-ball labelled “casting vote.” This, striking
-the duke full in the rear, drives him towards a
-bank on which stand three grenadiers, the Princess
-of Salm (recognisable by the flag which she
-carries, labelled “Psalms”) and her little boy, who
-sings—</p>
-
-<div class="dpoemctr"><div class="dstanzactr">
-<span class="spp00">My daddy is a grenadier</span>
-<span class="spp01">And he’s pleas’d my Mammy O,</span>
-<span class="spp00">With his <i>long swoard</i> and <i>broadswoard</i></span>
-<span class="spp01">And his bayonet so handy O.</span>
-</div></div>
-
-<p>The duke, from whose hand falls his petition,
-and whose head is adorned with a cuckold’s horns,
-cries aloud, “Pity the sorrow of a poor young
-man”; whilst Cochrane thunders out, “No, no,
-we’ll have no petitions here. Do you thint (<i>sic</i>)
-we are not up to your hoaxing, cadging tricks?
-You vagrant, do you think we’ll believe all you
-say or swear? Do you think that your services
-or your merits will do you any good here? If
-you do, I can tell you from experience that you
-are cursedly mistaken. So set off and don’t show
-your ugly face here again. If you do, shiver my
-timbers if I don’t send you to Ellenborough
-Castle: aye, aye, my boy, I’ll clap you in the
-<i>grated chamber</i>, where there’s neither
-door, window, <span class="xxpn" id="p067">{67}</span>
-onr (<i>sic</i>) fireplace. I’ll put you in the <i>Stocks</i>! I’ll
-put you in the <i>Pillory</i>! I’ll <i>fine</i> you. I’ll, I’ll
-play hell with you! D—— me, I think I have
-just come in time to give you a shot between wind
-and water.”</p>
-
-<p>On the ground below the flying duke lie documents
-recording his pensions and salaries.</p>
-
-<p>No wonder, you will say, that such a scandalous
-attack upon a personage so near the throne should
-be suppressed with a high hand. The marvel is
-that artist and publisher should have escaped the
-fate of Henry White and the pamphleteer Phillips.
-But you will be more surprised than ever when
-you learn that not only did artist and publisher go
-scot-free, but that the plate, so far from being
-suppressed, was published and scattered broadcast
-amongst the people without protest.</p>
-
-<p>Why, then, it will be asked, does it take its
-place in a treatise on suppressed plates? I will
-tell you.</p>
-
-<p>Do you not notice in the darker impression of
-the plate here reproduced—darker because the
-original has been painted—that such perspective as
-the picture has is destroyed by a
-great black blot <span class="xxpn" id="p068">{68}</span>
-which reaches from the feet of the three soldiers
-right down to the path in the right-hand lower
-corner of the design? Well, that great black blot
-covers what would have inevitably landed George
-Cruikshank and Mr. W. N. Jones of 5 Newgate
-Street, publisher, in a larger building higher up
-the same street, if it had not been for a happy
-afterthought of Mr. W. N. Jones, which took
-shape in a liberal use of lamp-black.<a class="afnanc" href="#fn18" id="fnanc18">18</a></p>
-
-<p>On the space so covered the reckless George,
-unmindful of the fate of Henry White, had etched
-the scantily clothed figure of the unhappy valet
-Sellis, with bleeding throat, crying aloud, “Is
-this a razor that I see before me? Thou canst
-not say I did it.”</p>
-
-<div class="dftnt">
-<p class="pfirst"><a class="afnlabel" href="#fnanc18" id="fn18">18</a>
-This use of lamp-black has its parallel in the case of one of
-the tailpieces to Bewick’s <i>Birds</i>, in the first edition of which an
-apprentice was employed to veil certain indelicacies with a coat of
-ink. Unfortunately, from want of density, the colouring rather serves
-to accentuate than hide the offending details. In the next edition a
-plug was inserted in the block and two bars of wood engraved in the
-interests of decency.</p></div>
-
-<p>After but one or two proofs had been pulled,
-George and his publisher would seem to have
-become appalled at their temerity, and the plate
-was only issued coloured and
-with the peccant <span class="xxpn" id="p069">{69}</span>
-figure blotted out. For many years I hoped and
-hoped in vain to come across an uncoloured proof
-displaying the hidden figure. But it was not until
-1905 that I was fortunate enough to light upon
-the probably unique proof here reproduced, which
-had passed out of the Bruton collection into that of
-the omnivorous collector, the late Edwin Truman.</p>
-
-<p>For the sake of those who have preserved the
-valuable catalogue of the sale in 1897 of the Bruton
-collection of the works of George Cruikshank, it
-should be observed that Reid’s misnomer of the
-valet to which I have drawn attention above has
-been there repeated.</p>
-
-<p>So much, then, for the partially suppressed
-broadside of 1815, which incidentally may be
-looked upon as the forerunner of the blottesque
-censorship of Russian newspapers. We will now
-pass on to another broadside which was not only
-suppressed in full, but of which the copies that had
-already been sold were assiduously bought up.</p>
-
-<p>The cir­cum­stances surrounding this plate are
-by no means so dramatic as those with which we
-have last dealt. At the same time, by means of it
-we obtain one of those sharp
-contrasts in political <span class="xxpn" id="p070">{70}</span>
-moods and tenses which pleasurably tickle the
-imagination. We learn how little is absolute in
-life, how much is relative. We realise how the
-reactionary of to-day may have been the reformer
-of yesterday. In a word, we see in this most
-conservative member of the Russell administration
-of 1846–1852 and of the Coalition of 1853, in
-this complacent recipient of the peerage of
-Broughton de Gyfford and the Grand Cross of
-the Bath, in this happy husband of a Marquis’s
-daughter,—we see, I say, in this Tory nobleman of
-the ’fifties the irreconcilable John Cam Hobhouse
-of the early years of the century, committed to
-Newgate for breach of privilege, the author of
-the subversive <i>Letters to an Englishman</i>, and the
-rep­re­sen­ta­tive for Parliament of the Westminster
-mobocracy.</p>
-
-<div class="dbigpicture" id="f2.5">
-<div class="dctr01 dhtml">
-<img src="images/i071.jpg" width="1800" height="1434" alt="" />
-<div class="dcaption">“<i>A Trifling
-Mistake</i>”——<i>Corrected</i>——</div></div>
-
-<div class="dctr02 dhandheld">
-<img src="images/i071-epubmobi.png" width="799" height="1003" alt="" />
-<div class="dcaption">“<i>A Trifling
-Mistake</i>”——<i>Corrected</i>——</div>
-</div>
-<div class="dctr02 dhandheld">
-<img src="images/i071-epubmobi-detail.jpg" width="576" height="638" alt="" />
-<div class="dcaption">“<i>A Trifling
-Mistake</i>”——<i>Corrected</i>——[detail for epub/mobi editions]</div>
-</div></div><!--dbigpicture-->
-
-<p>In Cruikshank’s broadside here reproduced the
-future President of the Board of Control is
-represented twirling his thumbs in enforced retirement
-and with full leisure to repent of his indiscretions.
-Above the mantelpiece rep­re­sen­ta­tions of
-St. Stephen’s and Newgate are placed in sharp
-contrast. Below the last a former occupant of the
-<span class="xxpn" id="p072">{72}</span>
-cell has scratched a rude gibbet. The grate is
-empty. On the table stand an empty pewter pot
-and pipe. On the wall is seen a long quotation
-from his anonymous pamphlet <i>A Trifling Mistake</i>,
-for which he has been committed to prison. This,
-with a barbed addition, gives the title to the
-broadside itself. The quotation
-<span class="nowrap">runs:—</span></p>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>“What prevents ye people from walking down to ye house
-and pulling out ye members by ye ears, locking up their
-doors and flinging ye key into ye Thames? Is it any
-majesty which lodges in the members of that assembly? Do
-we love them? Not at all: we have an instinctive horror
-and disgust at the very abstract idea of ye boroughmonger.
-Do we respect them? Not in the least. Do we regard
-them as endowed with any superior qualities? On the
-contrary, there is scarcely a poorer creature than your mere
-member of Parliament; though, in his corporate capacity,
-ye earth furnishes not so absolute a bully. Their true
-practical protectors, then—the real efficient anti-reformers,—are
-to be found at ye Horse Guards and ye Knightsbridge
-Barracks. As long as the House of Commons majorities
-are backed by the regimental muster roll, so long may those
-who have got the tax power keep it and hang those who
-resist”!!!&#x202f;!!!&#x202f;!!!</p>
-
-<div>Vide <i>Trifling Mistake</i>.</div></blockquote>
-
-<p>Below this hangs a bill headed “Little Hob in
-the Well.” <span class="xxpn" id="p073">{73}</span></p>
-
-<p>The re­pro­duc­tion of the etching here given is
-from a very interesting touched proof in the
-British Museum. Upon it the artist’s work in
-pencil can be plainly traced. To the right of
-the picture of Newgate another roughly drawn
-gibbet can be dis­tin­guished. On the bill the
-words have been added, “A New Song in
-Defence of the People, corrected,” etc. The
-profile of the prisoner has been carefully reduced,
-and a punning sub-title to the whole added, “How
-Cam you to be in that Hobble?”</p>
-
-<p>The date on the margin is January 1, 1819
-(obviously a mistake for 1820), and its pub­li­ca­tion,
-no doubt, went some way towards Hobhouse’s
-election as member for Westminster, which took
-place immediately after his release on the 20th
-day of the month in the year 1820.</p>
-
-<p>After his elevation to the peerage Hobhouse
-took no active part in public affairs. He died as
-lately as 1869, leaving no issue. Probably the plate
-was suppressed on the ground that it contained
-the long quotation given above from the lawless
-pamphlet for which he was imprisoned.</p>
-
-<p>As I have said in an earlier chapter,
-it is not my <span class="xxpn" id="p074">{74}</span>
-intention to make this treatise in any way a devil’s
-directory for those in search of salacious curiosities.
-I shall therefore not dwell upon the suppressed
-woodcut, which is rather coarse than loose, of
-“The Dead Rider” in the <i>Italian Tales</i> of 1823.
-I merely mention it for the sake of those who
-may be collating the book, and would find themselves
-misled by Reid’s note on the subject. He
-speaks of the “Elopement” woodcut being “wanting
-in two or three copies consulted of the first edition,”
-as though this were a matter for surprise. He fails
-to draw the very obvious conclusion that “The
-Elopement” was substituted for “The Dead Rider,”
-so that the number of illus­tra­tions might continue
-to tally with the announcement on the title-page,
-“Sixteen illustrative drawings by George Cruikshank.”
-He has apparently been confused by the
-fact, which I notice confuses a good many secondhand
-booksellers, that every copy has <i>a</i> woodcut
-entitled “The Dead Rider,” but that it is only
-the first issue that has <i>two</i> woodcuts with the
-same title.</p>
-
-<p>And, whilst touching on the subject of Cruikshank’s
-early indiscretions, it will, I
-think, be only <span class="xxpn" id="p075">{75}</span>
-fair to repeat a story of pretty and spontaneous
-atonement which I have told elsewhere, and which
-deals with another suppressed broadside.</p>
-
-<p>No. 887 in Reid’s catalogue is “Accidents
-in High Life, or Royal Hobbys broke down,
-Dedicated to the Society for the Suppression of
-Vice.” Its companion picture is “Royal Hobbys
-of the Hertfordshire Cock Horse,” which was
-suppressed as being too suggestive even for so
-latitudinarian an age as that of the Regency. In
-the former the artist portrays the discomfiture
-of the Prince and the Marchioness of Hertford
-through the pole of the hobby-horse, upon which
-they have been riding, breaking and throwing both
-of them to the ground. The lady is cursing her
-folly in trusting herself to “such an old stick,”
-while her admirer is exclaiming that he shall try
-the Richmond Road in the future, the Hertford
-one being so unsatisfactory. The Duke of York
-is suffering from a similar disaster, and congratulating
-himself upon the softness of the cushion by
-which his fall has been broken, in allusion to his
-income of £10,000 for having charge of his father.</p>
-
-<p>Now Mr. Bruton, who, like the
-late Mr. Truman, <span class="xxpn" id="p076">{76}</span>
-had the advantage of George Cruikshank’s friendship
-in later years, was able to obtain authentication
-or repudiation of doubtful unsigned work from the
-artist himself, and, amongst others, this plate was
-submitted to him for judgment. The man’s honesty
-forced him to acknowledge himself to be the author
-of this piece of full-blooded vulgarity, but his regret
-has altered the usual laconic record of “Not by me,
-G. Ck.,” or “By my brother, I. R. C.,” pencilled on
-the plate, to “Sorry to say this is by me, G. C.”
-The old man was, when he came to look back upon
-a long life of good and evil mixed, somewhat more
-human than that terribly pious hero of Pope’s—</p>
-
-<div class="dpoemctr"><div class="dstanzactr">
-<span class="spp00">Who calmly looked on either life, and here</span>
-<span class="spp00">Saw nothing to regret, or there to bear;</span>
-<span class="spp00">From nature’s temp’rate feast rose satisfy’d,</span>
-<span class="spp00">Thank’d heav’n that he had liv’d, and that he dy’d.</span>
-</div></div>
-
-<p>He looked back with genuine remorse upon
-youthful ex­trav­a­gances, and, though doubt­less
-inclined by nature to be some­thing of a <i>poseur</i>,
-and though he at­ti­tu­di­nised some­what too much
-over his virtuous fads at last, was not going to
-bolster up his reputation by an easy forgetfulness
-of early indiscretions. <span class="xxpn" id="p077">{77}</span></p>
-
-<div class="dctr01" id="f2.6">
-<img src="images/i077.png" width="799" height="702" alt="" />
-<div class="dcaption">Philoprogenitiveness</div></div>
-
-<p>Only a few words need be said of the other
-Cruikshank sup­pres­sions here reproduced. The
-first is the well-known plate “Phil­o­pro­gen­i­tive­ness,”
-which was published in the earliest separate
-edition of that noble <i>Essay on the Genius of George
-Cruikshank</i>, written by Thackeray for,
-and reprinted <span class="xxpn" id="p078">{78}</span>
-from, <i>The Westminster Review</i> in 1840. And surely
-it was a prurient and unnatural squeamishness
-which condemned this illus­tra­tion to exclusion
-in the subsequent editions. It is from the
-<i>Phrenological Illustrations</i>, published in 1826, one
-of the most famous of Cruikshank’s pub­li­ca­tions.
-I shall follow Thackeray’s excellent example of
-refraining from any description, and just leave the
-design to speak for itself, for it is a ridiculous task
-“to translate his designs into words, and go to the
-printer’s box for a description of all that fun and
-humour which the artist can produce by a few
-skilful turns of his needle.”</p>
-
-<p>The second is the cancelled wood engraving
-entitled “Drop it,” which appears on page 18 of
-the first edition of <i>Talpa; or the Chronicle of
-a Clay Farm, an Agricultural Fragment</i>, by
-C. M. H(oskyns), published in 1853. For some
-unknown reason it disappears from subsequent
-editions, and is only of importance to those who
-pride themselves on being the possessors of Cruikshank
-<i>editiones principes</i>.</p>
-
-<div class="dctr02" id="f2.7">
-<img src="images/i079.png" width="799" height="508" alt="" />
-<div class="dcaption">“Drop it!”</div></div>
-
-<p>There is another Cruikshank sup­pres­sion which
-might, were we hard up for material,
-be dragged <span class="xxpn" id="p079">{79}</span>
-into a treatise on suppressed illus­tra­tions. I refer
-to a wood engraving of the redoubtable George
-himself taking his publisher, Brooks, by the nose
-with a pair of tongs, which resulted in the
-sup­pres­sion of the pamphlet entitled <i>A Pop-gun
-fired off by George Cruikshank, etc.</i>, in which it
-appeared. But if we were to open these pages
-to the con­sid­er­ation of suppressed books and
-pamphlets, I should soon find my publishers
-remonstrating, and the volume too big to handle.
-Further, it affords me the gratifying opportunity
-of referring the reader to a small book of mine,
-published in 1897, by Mr. W. P. Spencer, of
-27 New Oxford Street, and
-entitled <i>George</i> <span class="xxpn" id="p080">{80}</span>
-<i>Cruikshank’s Portraits of Himself</i> which I, as
-the author, of course consider has not attained
-the circulation it deserves. There will be found
-a full account of the suppressed pamphlet,
-together with a re­pro­duc­tion of the offending
-design.</p>
-
-<p>Let me close this chapter with “A Cruikshank
-Outrage,” which I originally contributed to <i>The
-Gentleman’s Magazine</i>. It is, I think, sufficiently
-apropos, and will, I hope, appeal to all good
-Cruikshankians.</p>
-
-<div class="dpoemlft"><div class="dstanzalft">
-<span class="spp00">This is the bookcase, this the key;</span>
-<span class="spp00">None may open this lock but me;</span>
-</div><div class="dstanzalft">
-<span class="spp00">And only those of the cult may come</span>
-<span class="spp00">Into my <i>sanctum sanc-to-rum</i>.</span>
-</div><div class="dstanzalft">
-<span class="spp00">Swear “by George” on his “Omnibus”</span>
-<span class="spp00">You are assuredly one of us.</span>
-</div><div class="dstanzalft">
-<span class="spp00">Swear “by George” on his “Almanack”</span>
-<span class="spp00">You will return each volume back.</span>
-</div><div class="dstanzalft">
-<span class="spp00">Swear by “Grimm” <i>in the earliest state</i></span>
-<span class="spp00">Theft and pillage you reprobate.</span>
-</div><div class="dstanzalft">
-<span class="spp00">Yes, that’s bound by Rivière, but</span>
-<span class="spp00">Here’s <i>the original cloth, uncut</i>.</span>
-</div><div class="dstanzalft">
-<span class="spp00">The “Bee and the Wasp” <i>on India, tilt</i>,</span>
-<span class="spp00">Zaehnsdorf binder, <i>morocco, gilt</i>.</span>
-</div><div class="dstanzalft">
-<span class="spp00">But all my “Scourges” plain bound shall bide—</span>
-<span class="spp00">Plenty of “guilt” may be found inside.
-<span class="xxpn" id="p081">{81}</span></span>
-</div><div class="dstanzalft">
-<span class="spp00">Here’s my “Omnibus,” worth a fief</span>
-<span class="spp00">Because I’ve the unpaged preface-leaf.</span>
-</div><div class="dstanzalft">
-<span class="spp00">“London Characters,” set complete,</span>
-<span class="spp00"><i>Sm. 8vo, in hlf. clf. neat</i>.</span>
-</div><div class="dstanzalft">
-<span class="spp00">Here a set of gigantic frauds</span>
-<span class="spp00"><i>In the original</i> <span class="smmaj">LABELLED</span> <i>boards</i>.</span>
-</div><div class="dstanzalft">
-<span class="spp00">“Oliver Twist,” as you will have guessed,</span>
-<span class="spp00">The “Rose and Oliver” plate suppressed:</span>
-</div><div class="dstanzalft">
-<span class="spp00">Not with the stippling over-writ—</span>
-<span class="spp00">Only Bruton<a class="afnanc" href="#fn19" id="fnanc19">19</a>
-can show you <span class="smmaj">IT.</span></span>
-</div><div class="dstanzalft">
-<span class="spp00">And here “The Bottle” <span class="smmaj">COLOURED,</span> date</span>
-<span class="spp00">Eighteen-hundred-and-forty-eight.</span>
-</div><div class="dstanzalft">
-<span class="spp00">Yes, no doubt, ’twas among the first</span>
-<span class="spp00">Thrusts that the Master launched at Thirst.</span>
-</div><div class="dstanzalft">
-<span class="spp00">!&#x202f;George, you say, was at best, you think,</span>
-<span class="spp00">As a Temperance man denouncing drink&#x202f;!</span>
-</div><div class="dstanzalft">
-<span class="spp00">!!&#x202f;You dare tell me you interlope</span>
-<span class="spp00">In quest of books for your “Band of Hope”&#x202f;!!</span>
-</div><div class="dstanzalft">
-<span class="spp00">!!!&#x202f;You swore “by George” on his “Omnibus”</span>
-<span class="spp00">You were assuredly one of us&#x202f;!!!</span>
-</div><div class="dstanzalft">
-<span class="spp00">!!!!&#x202f;Avaunt, I prithee, aroynt, vacate</span>
-<span class="spp00">This orthodox shrine to George the Great&#x202f;!!!!</span>
-</div><div class="dstanzalft">
-<span class="spp00">For only those of the cult may come</span>
-<span class="spp00">Into my <i>sanctum sanc-to-rum</i>.</span>
-</div></div>
-
-<div class="dftnt">
-<p class="pfirst"><a class="afnlabel" href="#fnanc19" id="fn19">19</a>
-Since the Bruton sale in 1897 this, alas,
-is no longer true.</p></div>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="h2herein" id="p082">CHAPTER VI
-<span class="h2small">
-HOGARTH’S “ENTHUSIASM DELINEATED,” “THE
-MAN OF TASTE,” AND “DON QUIXOTE”</span></h2></div>
-
-<p class="pfirst"><span class="smcap">I<b>N</b></span>
-Mr. Aus­tin Dob­son’s <i>Hogarth</i>, to which all
-stu­dents of that mas­ter are so deep­ly in­debt­ed,
-the fol­low­ing sen­tence con­cludes the list of
-“Prints of an Un­cer­tain Date”: “It has been
-thought un­neces­sary to in­clude two or three
-designs, the gross­ness of which neither the in­genuity
-of the artist nor the coarse taste of his
-time can reasonably be held to excuse.” And in
-this book I have made it a car­di­nal point to
-emulate Mr. Dobson’s excel­lent example.</p>
-
-<p>We remember in one of Mr. G. Russell’s amusing
-books the story of the erstwhile Member of
-Parliament who had accepted a peerage, not­with­stand­ing
-his pro­fes­sion of dem­o­cratic sen­ti­ments.
-There­upon one of his late
-sup­porters, <span class="xxpn" id="p083">{83}</span>
-with excellent, though somewhat brutal, metaphor,
-remarked, “Mr.&#x202f;—— says as how he’s going to the
-House of Lords to leaven it. I tell you he can’t
-no more leaven the House of Lords than you can
-sweeten a cart-load of muck with a pot of
-marmalade.” <i>Per contra</i>, let us always bear in
-mind, that were the cart full of marmalade, and
-the pot of muck, the latter would be fully
-sufficient to render the whole an abomination.
-Fortunately for us, the Hogarth “Suppressed
-Plates” which are befitting are of exceptional
-interest. And it may as well be pointed out here
-that those peculiarly gross ones which are often
-alluringly alluded to as “suppressed” are nothing
-of the sort. So far from being indeed effectively
-withdrawn from observation, they have had, as a
-matter of fact, particular attention drawn <i>to</i> them
-by the fussy ingenuity with which their concealment
-has been emphasised.</p>
-
-<p>The first of the Hogarth plates which we here
-reproduce—“Enthusiasm Delineated”—is of far
-greater intrinsic importance than any of those
-with which we have already dealt in the preceding
-chapters. It differs essentially
-from them not <span class="xxpn" id="p084">{84}</span>
-only in the fact that here the artist himself is the
-fount and origin of the sup­pres­sion but also in the
-fact that it is a fine example of those palimpsest
-plates of which more particular description will be
-found in later chapters of this book. Peculiar
-interest, too, attaches to the cir­cum­stance that,
-superb as it was in execution, and elaborate to a
-degree though it was in conception, it was no
-sooner finished than the artist deliberately decided
-against its pub­li­ca­tion, and destroyed the engraving
-after only two impressions had been taken
-from the copper. Fortunately for us, one of these
-is now in the possession of the British Museum.</p>
-
-<p>It will be interesting to those who are the
-happy possessors of <i>Hogarth Illustrated</i> and
-the <i>Anecdotes</i> to compare this with the reduced
-<i>copy</i> (a very different matter) made by
-Mills and published in these volumes. For it
-must always be remembered that Hogarth’s autograph
-engravings are infinitely more interesting
-than the copies, however eminent the journeyman
-engraver may have been.</p>
-
-<div class="dbigpicture" id="f2.8">
-<div class="dctr03 dhtml">
-<img src="images/i085.jpg" width="877" height="1280" alt="" />
-<div class="dcaption">Enlarged detail of
-Hogarth’s “Enthusiasm Delineated”</div></div>
-
-<div class="dctr03 dhandheld">
-<img src="images/i085-epubmobi.png" width="800" height="1167" alt="" />
-<div class="dcaption">Enlarged detail of
-Hogarth’s “Enthusiasm Delineated”</div>
-</div></div><!--dbigpicture-->
-
-<p>Another plate was engraved by Mills of the size
-of the original, and published
-separately by Ireland <span class="xxpn" id="p086">{86}</span>
-in 1795. The date of the original plate is given
-in the British Museum Catalogue as 1739, but how
-that date is arrived at I am at a loss to understand.</p>
-
-<p>It will be noticed that there are upon the
-margin of our re­pro­duc­tion some curious <i>remarques</i>
-inscribed “the windmill,” “the scales,”
-and others. These were drawn in pen-and-ink by
-Hogarth on the margins of the two original impressions.
-They also appear engraved in facsimile
-on the second state of Mills’s full-sized plate. It
-will therefore be well for owners of this last not
-to jump to the hasty conclusion that they are the
-fortunate possessors of one of the two impressions
-mentioned above! It should be added that the
-MS. inscription on the British Museum copy
-differs considerably from that engraved by Mills.</p>
-
-<p>The method by which the sup­pres­sion of this
-plate came about is exceedingly curious.</p>
-
-<p>It is probable that, after the design was completed,
-Hogarth came to the conclusion that the
-intention of the satire might be mistaken, and
-that, instead of bringing ridicule upon “the
-superstitious absurdities of popery
-and ridiculous <span class="xxpn" id="p087">{87}</span>
-personification delineated by ancient painters,” it
-might be considered that his objective was religion
-itself.</p>
-
-<p>If this were so, the episode redounds greatly
-to the artist’s credit, and throws an effective light
-upon a little-known side of his character. It was
-an act of great nobleness to suppress what was the
-result of long toil, nay, more than that, what was
-perhaps his highest mental, though by no means
-his highest artistic, achievement, from what some
-might consider hyper-conscientious motives.</p>
-
-<p>It must be remembered that Hogarth lived in
-a gross and irreligious age, and that what appears
-to us exceedingly profane was largely the result of
-the outspokenness of the times.</p>
-
-<p>Ireland says that he altered and altered this
-plate piecemeal until its final sup­pres­sion. This,
-however, I venture to doubt, for reasons given
-below. At all events, in the end he had beaten
-out and re-engraved every figure save one, and
-changed, as Mr. Dobson says, what “was a compact
-satire” into “a desultory work—a work of
-genius for a lesser man, but scarcely worthy
-of Hogarth.” The final design
-was entitled <span class="xxpn" id="p088">{88}</span>
-“Credulity, Superstition and Fanaticism: a
-Medley,” and was published in March 1762.</p>
-
-<p>Let us now compare the two designs.
-Hogarth’s general purpose in the first was, in his
-own words, to give “a lineal rep­re­sen­ta­tion of the
-strange effects of literal and low conceptions of
-Sacred Beings, as also of the idolatrous tendency
-of Pictures in Churches and Prints in Religious
-Books.” In the second his text was, “Believe not
-every spirit, but try the spirits whether they are
-of God, because many false Prophets are gone out
-into the world.”</p>
-
-<p>Before comparing the designs in detail, I should
-like to say that, besides carefully examining the
-plates for myself, I have collated the various
-descriptions of Ireland, Nichols, Mr. Austin
-Dobson, and Mr. F. G. Stephens, whose conclusions
-I have not hesitated to adopt, add to,
-discard or modify, as the cir­cum­stances have
-seemed to require.</p>
-
-<p>Let us now particularise the incidents portrayed
-on the two states of the plate, both of which are
-here reproduced for purposes of comparison.</p>
-
-<div class="dbigpicture" id="f1.14">
-<div class="dctr03 dhtml">
-<img src="images/i088fp.jpg" width="1300" height="2140" alt="" />
-<div class="dcaption"><span class="smmaj">PLATE I.</span>
-“Enthusiasm Delineated. (Humbly dedicated to
-his Grace the Arch Bishop of Canterbury by his Graces most
-obedient humble Servant <i>Wm. Hogarth</i>”)
-</div></div>
-
-<div class="dctr04 dhandheld">
-<img src="images/i088fp-a-epubmobi.jpg" width="799" height="145" alt="" />
-<img src="images/i088fp-b-epubmobi.jpg" width="799" height="874" alt="" />
-<img src="images/i088fp-c-epubmobi.jpg" width="799" height="299" alt="" />
-<div class="dcaption"><span class="smmaj">PLATE I.</span>
-“Enthusiasm Delineated. (Humbly dedicated to
-his Grace the Arch Bishop of Canterbury by his Graces most
-obedient humble Servant <i>Wm. Hogarth</i>”)
-</div></div></div><!--dbigpicture-->
-
-<div class="dbigpicture" id="f1.15">
-<div class="dctr03 dhtml">
-<img src="images/i089fp.jpg" width="1300" height="2032" alt="" />
-<div class="dcaption"><span class="smmaj">PLATE II.</span>
-“Credulity, Superstition, and Fanaticism. A
-Medley”</div></div>
-
-<div class="dctr04 dhandheld">
-<img src="images/i089fp-a-epubmobi.jpg" width="799" height="976" alt="" />
-<img src="images/i089fp-b-epubmobi.jpg" width="799" height="284" alt="" />
-<div class="dcaption"><span class="smmaj">PLATE II.</span>
-“Credulity, Superstition, and Fanaticism. A
-Medley”</div></div></div><!--dbigpicture-->
-
-<p>Beginning with the preacher,
-we notice that <span class="xxpn" id="p089">{89}</span>
-his is the only figure practically unaltered and
-common to both engravings. By his “bull-roar”
-(<i>vide</i> the “scale of Vociferation” hanging on
-the wall to his left) he has apparently succeeded
-in cracking the sounding-board above his head.
-Notice his shaven crown, exposed by the fallen
-wig, which intimates that he is a Papist in disguise;
-and the harlequin jacket underneath his
-gown, which suggests that he is a religious merry-andrew.
-A point worth remarking is that the
-halo surrounds his wig, and not his head!</p>
-
-<p>From his right hand (Plate I.) he suspends a
-puppet (caricatured from a picture of Raphael’s)
-supporting the sacred triangle, which, in attempting
-to personify the Trinity, was considered by
-some to be a profane materialisation of a mystical
-idea. This he has ingeniously turned into a gridiron
-or trivet of the Inquisition by the simple
-addition of three legs. In Plate II. this puppet
-has been removed and its place taken by a witch,
-riding on a broom-handle, who is suckling what
-appears to be a huge rat. Beyond the preacher’s
-hand we find a further addition in the shape of a
-cherub, hunting-cap on head, bearing
-in its mouth <span class="xxpn" id="p090">{90}</span>
-a letter directed “To St. Moneytrap.” The
-sermon paper, too, has been turned about so as to
-bring the words “I speak as a fool” into greater
-prominence. In which connection it may be
-noticed that in “Enthusiasm Delineated” all the
-lettering would seem to be from the burin of
-Hogarth, whilst that in the “Medley” has been
-put in by a writing engraver, with considerable
-weakening of the general effect. Dangling from
-the preacher’s left hand is a devil with a gridiron
-(after Rubens), practically identical in both plates,
-though obviously re-engraved.</p>
-
-<p>Further puppets hang ready for use on the
-panels of the pulpit. In Plate I. they are
-caricature rep­re­sen­ta­tions, from pictures of the
-Old Masters, of Adam and Eve (suggested by
-Albert Dürer), of Peter with his Key, and Paul
-in a black periwig armed with two swords and
-elevated by high-heeled shoes (travestied from
-Rembrandt), and of Moses and Aaron. In Plate
-II. these scriptural puppets are exchanged for the
-superstitious images of Mrs. Veal’s ghost (see the
-writing on the book), who, according to Defoe,
-appeared the day after her death to
-Mrs. Bargrave <span class="xxpn" id="p091">{91}</span>
-of Canterbury, September 8, 1705; of Julius
-Cæsar’s apparition, starting at its own appearance
-in the looking-glass; and of that of Sir George
-Villers (<i>sic</i>), not “Villiers” as Ireland has it, whose
-appearance to an officer at Windsor, charging him
-to warn his son, the Duke of Buckingham, of his
-approaching assassination, is recorded by Lord
-Clarendon and Lilly the astrologer.</p>
-
-<p>In the foreground, on the right, we have in
-both plates a most remarkable mental thermometer,
-the bulb of which is inserted in a Methodist’s
-brain. In Plate I. the mercury stands at “low-spirits”;
-in Plate II. at “lukewarm.” In the
-first a dove surmounts the whole; in the second
-the Methodist’s brain rests upon “Wesley’s
-Sermons,” and “Glanvid” (an evident misprint
-for “Glanvil”) on “Witches.” The lettering, too,
-is altered, and, in place of the inscription in the
-top division, is a picture of the Cock Lane Ghost,
-of which Walpole wrote—“Elizabeth Canning and
-the Rabbit Women were modest impostors in
-comparison of this.” The whole is surmounted by
-a figure of the Tedworth drummer immortalised
-by Addison. <span class="xxpn" id="p092">{92}</span></p>
-
-<p>In the adjoining pew a nobleman, as can be
-seen by the decoration half concealed by his coat,
-makes love to a girl, who discards a heavenly for
-a very earthly affection, point to which is given
-by the quotation from Whitfield’s hymn which
-can be read on the paper hanging over the adjacent
-clerk’s desk. The “mixed expression of religious
-hypocrisy and amorous desire” on the girl’s face
-is marvellously expressed. The other occupant of
-the pew is a repentant thief, as may be seen from
-the “T” branded on his cheek.</p>
-
-<p>In the first account of the plate given in the
-<i>Catalogue of Prints and Drawings in the British
-Museum</i>, the suggestion that the felon sniffs at
-a bottle of spirits held in the hands of the image
-is obviously incorrect. He is dropping his tears
-into the bottle. In Plate II. a less aristocratic
-and somewhat more decently behaved pair of
-lovers occupy the pew. The puppet held by the
-man is clearly a repetition of the Cock Lane Ghost,
-only bearing in its hand a lighted candle in place
-of a hammer. What the meaning of this is I fail
-to understand. Of the two other occupants of
-the pew one is weeping and
-the other asleep. <span class="xxpn" id="p093">{93}</span>
-A winged devil whispers evil thoughts into the
-sleeper’s ear.</p>
-
-<p>In both plates, on a bracket attached to the
-side of the pew and inscribed “The Poor’s Box,”
-rests a wire rat-trap in place of the proper receptacle.</p>
-
-<p>Turning now to the clerk’s desk, which in Plate
-I. has the inscription “Cherubim and Seraph [&#x202f;—&#x202f;]
-do cry,” and in Plate II. “Continually do cry,”
-we find a hideous and brutal-looking clerk singing
-lustily from a book which he half supports in his
-claw-like fingers. Supporting him are two winged
-cherubs, the ridiculous nothingness of whose
-bodies (so envied by Thackeray in his days of
-pupilage) is accentuated by the significant addition
-of ducks’ feet. Their pitiful faces accord with the
-punning inscription on the edge of the desk. In
-Plate II. the ducks’ feet have been removed, but
-to make up for the loss we have the clerk himself,
-now a lean and hungry-looking individual, also
-decorated with a pair of wings.</p>
-
-<p>Below the desk in Plate I. howls a dog, his
-collar engraved with Whitfield’s name, whilst,
-below the hassock on which he
-sits, a ragged <span class="xxpn" id="p094">{94}</span>
-figure squats embracing an image. In Plate II.
-a book entitled <i>Demonology, by K. James Ist.</i>,
-surmounted by a shoeblack’s basket in which
-<i>Whitfield’s Journal</i> is stuck, takes the place of the
-dog, whilst the boy of Bilston, vomiting forth
-nails, displaces the ragged figure. From the neck
-of the bottle in his hand a figure, similar to that
-held by the man in the pew, rises expelling the
-cork, which falls to the ground.</p>
-
-<p>In the forefront of Plate I. lies the bloated
-figure of Mother Douglas, who, after a most
-licentious life, was said to have become a rigid
-devotee. Hogarth, who has portrayed her in
-other of his plates, here ridicules her conversion.
-A hand belonging to a figure outside the plate
-holds a bottle of salts to her nose. In Plate II.
-Mary Tofts, “ye Godliman woman,” takes her
-place. Her well-known imposture, which it would
-be out of place to particularise here, gave rise to a
-voluminous literature, and a sheaf of remarkable
-caricatures. In place of the salts a glass of cordial
-is applied as a restorative.</p>
-
-<div class="dbigpicture" id="f2.9">
-<div class="dctr01 dhtml">
-<img src="images/i095.jpg" width="1200" height="795" alt="" />
-<div class="dcaption">
-<table class="caption-table" summary="">
-<tr>
- <td><div>The Chandelier in “Enthusiasm”</div></td>
- <td><div>The Chandelier in “Credulity”</div></td></tr></table>
-</div></div><!--dctr01-->
-
-<div class="dctr03 dhandheld">
-<img src="images/i095-a-epubmobi.jpg" width="799" height="1069" alt="" />
-<div class="dcaption">The Chandelier in “Enthusiasm”</div>
-</div>
-
-<div class="dctr03 dhandheld">
-<img src="images/i095-b-epubmobi.jpg" width="748" height="1020" alt="" />
-<div class="dcaption">The Chandelier in “Credulity”</div>
-</div></div><!--dbigpicture-->
-
-<p>In Plate I., behind the prostrate woman a
-bearded Jew regards the
-preacher with mock <span class="xxpn" id="p096">{96}</span>
-devotion, what time he kills a flea between his
-thumb-nails. Before him lies a book open at a
-picture of Abraham offering up Isaac. In Plate
-II. the figure of the Jew is much weakened, whilst
-a knife inscribed “Bloody” is laid across a picture
-of an altar on the page of the open book.</p>
-
-<p>In the background of both plates a motley
-collection of devotees assists at these religious
-orgies. To the extreme left of Plate II., which,
-by the addition of several persons in the congregation,
-has become greatly overcrowded, a minister
-directs the attention of a terrified wretch, whose
-hair bristles with fear, to the ex­traor­di­nary double-globed
-chandelier above their heads.</p>
-
-<p>Final emphasis is given to the whole satire by
-the figure of a Turk (slightly varied in the two
-plates), who regards with amusement through the
-window the idolatry of those “dogs of Christians.”</p>
-
-<p>So much for the details of the plates. As
-regards the general effect of the whole, the
-superiority of the suppressed design will be evident
-at a glance. In lighting, balance, and composition,
-the substituted design is immeasurably removed
-from the original. Nor would this
-be wonderful if, <span class="xxpn" id="p097">{97}</span>
-as Ireland surmised, “the alterations were made
-by degrees.”</p>
-
-<p>With this view, however, I find it, as I have
-said above, impossible to concur. If, as he suggests,
-the figures were beaten out one by one, their
-substitutes would occupy practically identical
-spaces on the plate; but a little measurement
-demonstrates the fact that, with the exception of
-the figure of the preacher, which has been left
-where it was, and of the mental thermometer,
-which has been raised, almost the whole of the
-design has been shifted downwards.</p>
-
-<p>I am therefore inclined to think that from the
-first Hogarth, from one cause or another, made up
-his mind to change the direction of his satire, and
-at once beat out all the figures on the plate save
-one. That the arrangement of the new design
-should coincide generally with that of the first is,
-I think, no more than one would naturally expect,
-and does not in any way weaken the argument.</p>
-
-<p>In conclusion, it should be pointed out, for the
-sake of those who would study the matter further,
-that the accounts of the impressions of the several
-plates in the <i>Catalogue of
-Prints and Drawings <span class="xxpn" id="p098">{98}</span>
-in the British Museum</i> are not easily found, being
-somewhat arbitrarily placed at pages 301–307, vol.
-iii., part i., and pages 644–648, vol. ii., respectively.</p>
-
-<hr class="hrblk" />
-
-<p>So far we have seen Hogarth in his character of
-general iconoclast and antipapist. It is now our
-business to deal with him in what was a more
-personal polemic.</p>
-
-<p>In the year 1731 Pope first published his
-notorious attack upon the Duke of Chandos in his
-satire <i>Of Taste: An Epistle to the Right Hon.
-Richard, Earl of Burlington</i>.</p>
-
-<p>Hogarth forthwith entered the lists, and designed
-and published a well-deserved pictorial
-counterblast, allusively entitled “The Man of
-Taste,” or “Burlington Gate.” This was immediately
-“suppressed” on a prosecution being
-threatened because of what was deemed its
-scurrilous and defamatory character.</p>
-
-<p>Not­with­stand­ing this prompt sup­pres­sion, however,
-the design reappeared the following year,
-reduced in size, as frontispiece to a pirated edition
-of Pope’s “Epistle,” which was included in a
-pamphlet entitled <i>A Miscellany
-on Taste; by <span class="xxpn" id="p099">{99}</span>
-Mr. Pope, etc.</i>, published by Lawton and others.
-Its contents were (1) Of Taste in Architecture,
-an Epistle to the Earl of Burlington, with <i>Notes
-Variorum</i>, and a complete Key; (2) Of Mr. Pope’s
-Taste in Divinity: viz., the Fall of Man, and the
-First Psalm, translated for the use of a Young
-Lady; (3) Of Mr. Pope’s Taste of Shakespeare;
-(4) His Satire on Mr. P——y; and (5) Mr.
-Congreve’s fine Epistle on Retirement and Taste,
-addressed to Lord Cobham. In this copy of the
-plate Pope, who is shown in the original by means
-of the back of his head and figure, and as wearing
-a full-bottomed wig, is more distinctly satirised,
-his face being displayed in profile, and his head
-enclosed by a linen cap instead of a wig. Amongst
-a few other minor alterations, it may be noticed
-that the palette held by Kent is transferred from
-one hand to the other.</p>
-
-<p>Referring to the repub­li­ca­tion of Hogarth’s
-cartoon in this form, Mr. Dobson seems somewhat
-inclined to argue against the story of
-its “sup­pres­sion,” or, at any rate, its effectual
-sup­pres­sion; but he does not allude to the important
-fact that the publisher
-of this pamphlet <span class="xxpn" id="p100">{100}</span>
-was <i>also</i> promptly prosecuted, and the sale strictly
-prohibited. From which it is clear that the
-sup­pres­sion was as unqualified and as prompt as
-could reasonably be expected.</p>
-
-<p>Steevens indeed mentions a copy upon which
-the following inscription had been
-<span class="nowrap">made:—</span></p>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>“Bo<sup>t</sup>. this book of Mr. Wayte, at the Fountain Tavern,
-in the Strand, in the presence of Mr. Draper, who told me
-he had it of the Printer, Mr. W. Rayner.</p>
-
-<p class="psignature">“J.
-<span class="smcap">C<b>OSINS.”</b></span></p></blockquote>
-
-<p class="pcontinue">The signatory was an Attorney, and the wording of
-the memorandum suggests the intended prosecution.</p>
-
-<p>To return to Pope’s poem. In it he passes
-the most scathing criticism upon the splendid
-but tasteless surroundings of “Timon” at his
-stupendous villa.</p>
-
-<div class="dpoemlft"><div class="dstanzalft">
-<span class="spquoteverse"><span class="spquoteblock">“</span>Greatness,
- with Timon, dwells in such a draught</span>
-<span class="spp00">As brings all Brobdingnag before your thought.</span>
-<span class="spp00">To compass this, his building is a town,</span>
-<span class="spp00">His pond an ocean, his parterre a down:</span>
-<span class="spp00">Who but must laugh, the master when he sees,</span>
-<span class="spp00">A puny insect, shivering at the breeze!</span>
-<span class="spp00">Lo, what huge heaps of littleness around!</span>
-<span class="spp00">The whole, a labour’d quarry above ground.</span>
-<span class="spp00">Two cupids squirt before: a lake behind</span>
-<span class="spp00">Improves the keenness of the northern wind.</span>
-<span class="spp00">His gardens next your admiration call,</span>
-<span class="spp00">On every side you look, behold the wall!
-<span class="xxpn" id="p101">{101}</span></span>
-<span class="spp00">No pleasing intricacies intervene,</span>
-<span class="spp00">No artful wildness to perplex the scene;</span>
-<span class="spp00">Grove nods at grove, each valley has a brother,</span>
-<span class="spp00">And half the platform just reflects the other.”</span>
-</div></div>
-
-<p>And then, at the end of it all, he proceeds to
-justify Providence, in giving riches to those who
-squander them, in a way that will hardly commend
-itself to the student of the dismal science. A bad
-taste, he says in effect, employs more hands, and
-diffuses wealth more usefully than a good one!
-One would like to have heard John Stuart Mill on
-the subject of “Pope.”</p>
-
-<p>The “Epistle” was addressed to Pope’s patron,
-the Earl of Burlington, who was one of the noblemen
-who had helped to screen him a few years
-before on his pub­li­ca­tion of the <i>Dunciad</i>.</p>
-
-<p>“Timon” (mainly though not entirely) referred to
-the Duke of Chandos, who was, Johnson says, a man
-perhaps too much delighted with pomp and show,
-but of a temper kind and beneficent, and who had
-consequently the voice of the public
-in his favour.<a class="afnanc" href="#fn20" id="fnanc20">20</a>
-<span class="xxpn" id="p102">{102}</span></p>
-
-<p>A violent outcry was there­fore raised against
-the in­grat­i­tude and treachery of Pope, who was
-said to have been indebted to the patronage of
-Chandos for a present of a thousand pounds, and
-who gained the oppor­tunity of insul­ting him by
-the kindness of his invitation to “Canons,” the
-Duke’s seat near Edgware.</p>
-
-<p>In a pamphlet entitled <i>Ingratitude</i> published
-in 1733, of which only a portion of the frontispiece
-is in the British Museum,<a class="afnanc" href="#fn21" id="fnanc21">21</a>
-the matter is thus alluded
-to. “A certain animal of diminutive size, who
-had translated a book into English metre (or at
-least had it translated for him), addressed himself
-to a nobleman of the first rank, and in the style of
-a gentleman-beggar requested him to subscribe a
-guinea for one of his books. The nobleman
-entertained him at dinner in a sumptuous manner,
-and continued so to do as often as the insignificant
-mortal came to his house. After dinner this
-generous man of quality, taking him aside, put a
-bank-note for five hundred pounds into his hands,
-and desired he might have but
-one book. But <span class="xxpn" id="p103">{103}</span>
-what was the consequence of this? Why, truly,
-the wretch, who is a composition of peevishness,
-spleen and envy, having no regard to the benefits
-he had received, in a few years after, and without
-any manner of provocation, or the least foundation
-for truth, publishes a satire, as he terms it, but in
-reality it is an infamous and calumnious libel,
-calculated, with all the malice and virulency
-imaginable, to defame and render odious the
-character of his best benefactor.”</p>
-
-<div class="dftnt">
-<p class="pfirst"><a class="afnlabel" href="#fnanc20" id="fn20">20</a>
-Bowles says, “As Pope was the first to deal in personalities, the
-following severe retaliation was published in the papers of the
-time:</p>
-
-<div class="dpoemctr"><div class="dstanzactr">
-<span class="spquoteverse"><span class="spquoteblock">“</span>Let
- Pope no more what Chandos builds deride,</span>
-<span class="spp00">Because he takes not Nature for his guide;</span>
-<span class="spp00">Since, wond’rous critic! in thy form we see</span>
-<span class="spp00">That <i>Nature</i> may mistake, as well as he.”</span>
-</div></div>
-
-<p class="pfirst padtopc"><a class="afnlabel" href="#fnanc21" id="fn21">21</a>
-Vide <i>Catalogue of Prints and Drawings in the British Museum</i>,
-Division I., <i>Satires</i>, vol. ii., No. 1935.</p></div>
-
-<p>From which it will be seen that Hogarth was
-not out of the fashion in retaliating upon Pope’s
-devoted head with the cartoon which we here
-reproduce.</p>
-
-<p>Let us examine it in detail. The gate, which
-is the main feature in the picture, is a travesty
-of that which is familiar to old frequenters of
-Piccadilly. Until as lately as 1868, it formed the
-frontage to Burlington House. It was the joint
-design of Lord Burlington and Colin Campbell,
-and, although well-proportioned and inoffensive,
-hardly justifies the fulsome praise which has been
-bestowed upon it. Kent, originally a coach-painter,
-with whose statue Hogarth
-has surmounted the <span class="xxpn" id="p104">{104}</span>
-structure, was patronised by, and brought his
-practical knowledge to the assistance of, Lord
-Burlington, himself undoubtedly a man of enlightened
-taste. The alteration and reconstruction
-of the original Burlington House, which had been
-built by his great-grandfather, the first Earl, was
-the first of his many architectural projects. It
-was eventually taken down to make way for the
-existing Royal Academy and Science Buildings.
-Lord Hervey laughed at its inconvenience in the
-following
-<span class="nowrap">couplet:—</span></p>
-
-<div class="dpoemctr"><div class="dstanzactr">
-<span class="spquoteverse"><span class="spquoteblock">“</span>Possessed
- of one great hall of state,</span>
-<span class="spp00">Without a room to sleep or eat.”</span>
-</div></div>
-
-<p class="pcontinue">The best of Lord Burlington’s and Kent’s joint
-work is to be found in the northern park front of
-the Treasury Buildings in Whitehall, “which,” says
-Fergusson, “if completed, would be more worthy
-of Inigo Jones than anything that has been done
-there since his time.”</p>
-
-<div class="dbigpicture" id="f2.10">
-<div class="dctr04 dhtml">
-<img src="images/i105.jpg" width="905" height="1561" alt="" />
-<div class="dcaption">The Man of Taste
-</div></div>
-
-<div class="dctr04 dhandheld">
-<img src="images/i105-a-epubmobi.jpg" width="799" height="35" alt="" />
-<img src="images/i105-b-epubmobi.jpg" width="780" height="1225" alt="" />
-<img src="images/i105-c-epubmobi.jpg" width="799" height="88" alt="" />
-<div class="dcaption">The Man of Taste
-</div></div></div><!--dbigpicture-->
-
-<p>Flanking the ex-coach-painter, Hogarth has placed reclining figures
-of Raphael and Michael Angelo, who regard the modern architect with
-respectful admiration! On the platform is Pope rough-casting the front
-of the structure, and <span class="xxpn" id="p106">{106}</span>
-incidentally bespattering the passers-by with whitewash from his
-huge brush. Chief amongst these is the Duke of Chandos, who vainly
-strives to protect himself with his hat. Ascending the ladder is
-Lord Burlington, who carries up more whitening for the beautifying
-of his own gate and the defilement of his neighbours’ clothes. Over
-the gate Hogarth has sarcastically inscribed the solitary word “<span
-class="smcap">T<b>ASTE.”</b></span> The double distribution of flattery
-and satire is an excellent pictorial burlesque of the <i>Epistle to Lord
-Burlington</i>, and who can say that it was not richly deserved? At any
-rate, stroke and counterstroke were fierce and unhesitating in those
-days, and, although Pope’s and his patrons’ influence was sufficient to
-get Hogarth’s witty plate suppressed, it is a tribute to the wholesome
-respect which the poet had for the artist, that, pugnacious and
-irrepressible as his pen generally was, Pope never ventured to make any
-written retaliation upon the libeller.</p>
-
-<p>It should be mentioned that this was not the
-first occasion upon which Hogarth had attacked the
-charlatanry of Kent. In the first plate published
-on his own account,
-in 1724—“Masquerades and <span class="xxpn" id="p107">{107}</span>
-Operas”—he had included him in his ridicule of
-what Mr. Dobson calls “foreign favourites and
-dubious exotics.” In that plate, also, he had
-ridiculed “Burlington Gate,” and, curiously
-prompted by the spirit of prophecy, had labelled
-it “Accademy (<i>sic</i>) of Arts!” He had also, in
-the following year, burlesqued Kent’s scandalous
-altarpiece at St. Clement Danes, which had lately
-been taken down in response to the outcry against
-its sacrilegious impudence.</p>
-
-<p>By the kindness of the publisher of <i>The Builder</i>,
-I am enabled to reproduce a wood engraving of
-Burlington Gate as it actually was, which appeared
-in that journal on October 28, 1854. Comparing
-this with the cartoon, it will be seen that Hogarth
-did not scruple to heighten the effect of his satire
-by depriving Lord Burlington’s edifice of such
-merits as it undoubtedly possessed.</p>
-
-<p>So much for Hogarth in his polemic with Pope.
-We will now turn for a moment to Hogarth and
-his quarrel with Wilkes and Churchill, in which we
-shall find him working over an old plate as in the
-case of “Enthusiasm Delineated,” but with a very
-different object in view. Here he
-adopts a method <span class="xxpn" id="p108">{108}</span>
-of retaliation which, as we shall learn from later
-chapters of this book, had become already customary
-amongst the producers of political broadsides in
-the seventeenth century. Hitherto Hogarth had
-kept clear of politics, but now, in his sixty-fifth
-year, he threw himself into the fray. John Wilkes
-had started a paper called <i>The North Briton</i> in
-opposition to <i>The Briton</i>, the organ of the Tory
-party of which Lord Bute was the leader. Hogarth
-had long enjoyed Bute’s favour. He had also
-until now been on friendly terms with Wilkes and
-his henchman Charles Churchill, the poet. On
-September 7, 1762, taking sides with his patron,
-he published <i>The Times</i> (Plate I.). This so enraged
-Wilkes that he retaliated on the Saturday following,
-in the seventeenth number of <i>The North Briton</i>,
-with a violent attack on Hogarth both as man and
-artist. In the May following Hogarth retorted
-by publishing a portrait of John Wilkes which,
-professing to be a likeness, cleverly exhibited his
-most repulsive characteristics. Wilkes being now
-on his trial for libel, Churchill came to the rescue
-with his savage and slashing <i>Epistle to William
-Hogarth</i>. This was published
-on August 1. <span class="xxpn" id="p110">{110}</span>
-With a promptitude astonishing in those days of
-tardy copper-plate engraving, Hogarth, by a clever
-expedient, retaliated within a month with his
-exceedingly venomous print of “The Bruiser.” The
-plate from which this was printed had already done
-duty as a portrait of Hogarth himself with his dog
-Trump, engraved from the well-known painting
-now in the National Gallery.</p>
-
-<div class="dctr03" id="f2.11">
-<img src="images/i109.jpg" width="600" height="915" alt="" />
-<div class="dcaption">Burlington Gate as it appeared prior to 1868
-</div></div>
-
-<p>Pressed for time, in ill-health, and apprehensive lest the public
-might attribute delay in replying to inability to do so, he took the
-old plate, burnished out his own portrait, and substituted in its place
-the head of a bear, with torn and soiled clerical bands about its neck,
-ruffles on its wrists, and clasping against its chest a foaming pot
-of beer, in allusion to the personal habits of the poet and ci-devant
-parson. With his left paw the beast clasps a huge club, the knots of
-which are labelled “Lye 1,” “Lye 2,” referring to the falsities of <i>The
-North Briton</i>. There are other minor alterations which may be seen at a
-glance. The whole was entitled “<span class="smcap">T<b>HE</b></span>
-<span class="smcap">B<b>RUISER,</b></span>
-<span class="smcap">C<b>HARLES</b></span> <span
-class="smcap">C<b>HURCHILL</b></span> (once the Rev<sup>d</sup>.!)
-In the character of a <span class="smcap">R<b>USSIAN</b></span>
-<span class="smcap">H<b>ERCULES,</b></span> regaling himself after
-having killed <span class="xxpn" id="p111">{111}</span> the
-<span class="smcap">M<b>ONSTER</b></span>
-<span class="smcap">C<b>ARICATURE,</b></span>
-that so sorely gall’d his virtuous friend, the Heaven-born
-Wilkes.” The plate thus altered is to be found in five states,
-particulars of which may be found on p. 286 of Mr. Austin Dobson’s
-<i>William Hogarth</i>, 1891. That here reproduced is from a <i>copy</i> of
-the last state engraved by Dent for John Ireland.<a class="afnanc"
-href="#fn22" id="fnanc22">22</a> It is only in the last two states that
-the clever little engraving in front of the palette is to be found.</p>
-
-<div class="dftnt">
-<p class="pfirst"><a class="afnlabel" href="#fnanc22" id="fn22">22</a>
-In copying, the design, as will be seen, has been turned from left
-to right.</p></div>
-
-<p>So far we have dealt with work done by Hogarth
-in his individual capacity. Let us now turn to such
-of his collaborative work as suffered cancellation.</p>
-
-<p>In dealing with the series of suppressed <i>Quixote</i>
-plates we shall be brought into touch with two not
-uninteresting and accessory episodes in the artist’s
-career. In the first of these Hogarth made a
-great success, where a rival artist had made a
-signal failure. In the second, by way of righting
-the balance of things, fate ordained it that this
-same artist should badly best Hogarth, and that in
-a manner peculiarly galling to the latter’s vanity.</p>
-
-<p>Hogarth’s father-in-law was Sir
-James Thornhill, <span class="xxpn" id="p112">{112}</span>
-whose drawing academy in Covent Garden had
-not proved as valuable an institution as had been
-anticipated. Johan Van der Banck, the rival
-artist above alluded to, had been one of Sir
-James’s pupils. By heading a secession and
-establishing a rival school he had undoubtedly
-largely contributed to the failure of his master’s
-venture. However, in due time, his school too
-proved to be lacking in the elements of success,
-and came to an untimely end.</p>
-
-<p>On Sir James’s death the “neglected apparatus”
-of his father-in-law passed into Hogarth’s hands,
-and he set to work to establish the academy on a
-different footing. The result was that it became
-a successful educational centre, which only ceased to
-exist many years afterwards on the establishment
-of the Royal Academy. A picture by Hogarth of
-the interior of the school with the students drawing
-from life is to be seen on the staircase leading to
-the Diploma Gallery at Burlington House.</p>
-
-<p>In this case Hogarth had the laugh on his side.
-In the other, which is immediately relevant to our
-subject, the laugh was with Van der Banck.</p>
-
-<div class="dbigpicture" id="f1.16">
-<div class="dctr01 dhtml">
-<img src="images/i112fp.jpg" width="1200" height="700" alt="" />
-<div class="dcaption">
-<table class="caption-table" summary="">
-<tr>
- <td>Portrait of Hogarth with His Dog Trump<sup
- id="fnanc23" title="footnote anchor 23, html edition">&#x2a;</sup></td>
- <td><i>The plate reversed and in its last state,
- now entitled</i> “The Bruiser”</td></tr></table>
-</div></div><!--dctr01-->
-
-<div class="dctr03 dhandheld">
-<img src="images/i112fp-a-epubmobi.jpg" width="600" height="732" alt="" />
-<div class="dcaption">Portrait of Hogarth with His Dog Trump<sup
- title="footnote anchor 23, epub/mobi editions">&#x2a;</sup></div></div>
-
-<div class="dctr03 dhandheld">
-<img src="images/i112fp-b-epubmobi.jpg" width="600" height="732" alt="" />
-<div class="dcaption"><i>The plate reversed and in its last state,
-now entitled</i> “The Bruiser”</div></div>
-</div><!--dbigpicture-->
-
-<div class="dftnt">
-<p class="pfirst"><sup id="fn23" title="footnote 23">&#x2a;</sup>
-The plate being re-engraved
-for <i>Hogarth Illustrated</i> became transposed.</p></div>
-
-<p>In 1738 Lord Carteret’s Spanish
-edition of <i>Don <span class="xxpn" id="p113">{113}</span>
-Quixote</i> was published. For this Hogarth had
-been commissioned to design a series of illus­tra­tions.
-Eight of these were executed, but, on
-being submitted to Lord Carteret, did not meet
-with his approval. The commission was consequently
-transferred to Johan van der Banck,
-who thus succeeded in revenging himself for his
-former failure, and at the same time unconsciously
-provided us with matter for con­sid­er­ation in these
-papers. His sixty-eight designs were engraved by
-Van der Gucht and republished in the English
-edition of 1756, of which Charles Jarvis was the
-translator. Of Hogarth’s unsuccessful venture
-John Ireland writes with some indignation, “As
-they are etched in a bold and masterly style, I
-suppose the noble peer did not think them <i>pretty
-enough</i> to embellish his volume and therefore laid
-them aside for Vandergucht’s engravings from
-Vanderbank’s designs.” It is a slight satisfaction
-to know that Hogarth’s completed etchings were
-paid for!</p>
-
-<p>One curious fact about Jarvis’s edition demands
-our attention. The plate representing the Don’s
-first sally in quest of adventure
-is without any <span class="xxpn" id="p114">{114}</span>
-signature, but the “style of the etching and the
-air of the figures” indisputably determine for us
-the fact that it is from the pencil and burin of
-Hogarth, so that it is open to any one who has
-access to this edition to judge for themselves
-of the justice of Ireland’s strictures upon Lord
-Carteret.</p>
-
-<p>For those who have not access to Jarvis’s
-edition it may be mentioned that a copy engraved
-by J. Mills appears in Ireland’s <i>Hogarth Illustrated</i>
-and in the <i>Anecdotes of William Hogarth</i>, published
-by Nichols in 1833. Of Hogarth’s eight designs
-we are therefore left with only seven, which were
-“suppressed.” Of these six were published from
-Hogarth’s own plates in Baldwin, Cradock and
-Joy’s splendid collection of the <i>Works</i> in 1822;
-whilst previously, in 1798, John Ireland had
-published small copies of them together with an
-unfinished design of “The Innkeeper” in his
-possession, engraved by J. Mills. These plates
-were used over again in the <i>Anecdotes</i> of 1833
-with altered lettering and the etchings considerably
-worn.</p>
-
-<div class="dctr05" id="f2.12">
-<img src="images/i115.jpg" width="600" height="1102" alt="" />
-<div class="dcaption">Don Quixote
-No. 1.—The Innkeeper</div></div>
-
-<p>The accompanying re­pro­duc­tions
-are, save for <span class="xxpn" id="p116">{116}</span>
-No. 1., not made from any of the foregoing, but
-from the early states of the plates, never before
-published, to be found in the British Museum.
-Thus they will prove not only of interest to the
-casual reader but also valuable, for purposes of
-comparison, to the possessors of any of the three
-editions of Hogarth’s <i>Works</i> mentioned above.
-The full descriptions of the plates may be found in
-Ireland and Nichols, but for the convenience of the
-reader I append a short commentary.</p>
-
-<p>No. I. <i>The Innkeeper</i> is from an unfinished
-etching and is of particular interest. By some its
-authenticity is doubted, but John Ireland believed
-in it, and I, for one, see no reason to call his
-judgment into question, more particularly as this
-figure bears a more than chance resemblance to
-that of “The Innkeeper” in the undoubted Hogarth
-referred to above published in Jarvis’s edition.
-In the Van der Banck plate, which represents the
-knighting of the Don by the Innkeeper, it is also
-evident that Hogarth’s rival has done him the
-compliment of adopting his model.</p>
-
-<div class="dctr02" id="f2.13">
-<img src="images/i117.jpg" width="730" height="985" alt="" />
-<div class="dcaption">Don Quixote
-No. II.—The Funeral of Chrysostom</div></div>
-
-<p>No. II. <i>The Funeral of Chrysostom, Marcella
-vindicating herself.</i> This scene
-was also taken <span class="xxpn" id="p118">{118}</span>
-by Van der Banck for illus­tra­tion, and a comparison
-of the two plates is not favourable to
-Hogarth.</p>
-
-<p>No. III. <i>The Innkeepers Wife and Daughter
-taking care of the Don after he had been beaten.</i>
-“Much superior to the same scene designed by
-Van der Banck.”</p>
-
-<p>No. IV. <i>Don Quixote seizes the Barber’s Basin
-for Mambrino’s Helmet.</i> On the whole inferior to
-Van der Banck’s. The barb of the Don’s weapon
-is different from that in the Hogarth design published
-by Jarvis. The stirrups and saddling of the
-horse too are different. These points have not
-been referred to before, but I mention them by
-way of argument against the authenticity of the
-Jarvis plate. As I have said before, personally I
-have no doubt that it is from Hogarth’s burin.</p>
-
-<p>No. V. <i>Don Quixote releases the Galley Slaves.</i>
-Here the Don is found wearing the barber’s basin
-as his helmet. By a not unusual oversight it will
-be noticed Hogarth has made his figures left-handed,
-forgetful of the reversing process due to
-printing from a plate. A superior design to that
-of Van der Banck, who, as
-Ireland says, “has <span class="xxpn" id="p121">{121}</span>
-given to two or three of the thieves the countenances
-of apostles.”</p>
-
-<div class="dctr02" id="f2.14">
-<img src="images/i119.jpg" width="738" height="999" alt="" />
-<div class="dcaption">Don Quixote
-No. III.—The Innkeeper’s Wife and Daughter</div></div>
-
-<div class="dctr02" id="f2.15">
-<img src="images/i120.jpg" width="780" height="977" alt="" />
-<div class="dcaption">Don Quixote No. IV.—Don Quixote seizes
- the Barber’s Basin</div></div>
-
-<p>No. VI. <i>The First Interview of the Valorous
-Knight of La Mancha with the Unfortunate Knight
-of the Rock.</i> Distinctly superior to Van der Banck.</p>
-
-<p>No. VII. <i>The Curate and Barber disguising
-themselves to convey Don Quixote home.</i> An excellent
-rep­re­sen­ta­tion of the curate assuming the
-dress of a distressed virgin who, by his tale of
-having been wronged by a naughty knight, hopes
-to induce the Don to return to his home.</p>
-
-<p>Whilst on the subject of Don Quixote it may
-be mentioned that, much earlier in his career,
-Hogarth had designed and engraved a plate dealing
-with “Sancho’s feast,” but this must not be
-in any way identified or confused with the series
-begun for Lord Carteret, although Ireland groups
-them all together.</p>
-
-<div class="dctr02" id="f2.16">
-<img src="images/i122.jpg" width="750" height="953" alt="" />
-<div class="dcaption">Don Quixote No. V.—Don Quixote releases
- the Galley Slaves</div></div>
-
-<div class="dctr02" id="f2.17">
-<img src="images/i123.jpg" width="750" height="1001" alt="" />
-<div class="dcaption">Don Quixote No. VI.—The First
- Interview</div></div>
-
-<p>So much for Hogarth’s suppressed illus­tra­tions,
-and it is, it must be confessed, something of a
-relief to turn again from his cognate art to that
-which is individual and typical. For we do not
-much value Hogarth as an illustrator. In this
-character he rarely does more than
-repeat for us <span class="xxpn" id="p124">{124}</span>
-in another medium the obvious matters already
-dealt with in the letterpress. “Illustration,” as
-Mr. Laurence Housman has well said, “should
-be something in the nature of a brilliant commentary
-throwing out new light upon the subject,
-an exquisite parenthesis of things better said in
-this medium than could be said in any other: in a
-word, the result of another creative faculty at
-work on the same theme.” And this in no way
-describes Hogarth’s work as an illustrator. It is
-as a great original painter working out consummately
-the homeliest of morals that he appeals to
-us. Those morals which, to quote Thackeray, are
-“as easy as Goody Twoshoes,” the moral of
-“Tommy was a naughty boy and the master
-flogged him, and Jacky was a good boy and had
-plum-cake.” For it is in “Marriage à la Mode,”
-“A Rake’s Progress,” “Industry and Idleness,”
-that he succeeds inimitably, carrying out the
-motto beneath “Time Smoking a
-<span class="nowrap">Picture”:—</span></p>
-
-<div class="dpoemctr"><div class="dstanzactr">
-<span class="spquoteverse"><span class="spquoteblock">“</span>To
- Nature and your Self appeal</span>
-<span class="spp00">Nor learn of others what to feel.”</span>
-</div></div>
-
-<div class="dctr03" id="f2.18">
-<img src="images/i125.jpg" width="705" height="982" alt="" />
-<div class="dcaption">Don Quixote
- No. VII.—The Curate and the Barber</div></div>
-
-<p>But this only in passing, for our subject
-debars us from lingering
-over Hogarth’s best. <span class="xxpn" id="p126">{126}</span>
-From the nature of our theme we are confined to
-the examination in the majority of cases of that
-which verges upon failure either from artistic or
-social con­sid­er­ations.</p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="h2herein" id="p127">CHAPTER VII
-<span class="h2smallctr">
- CANCELLED DESIGNS FOR <i>PUNCH</i> AND <i>ONCE A
- WEEK</i></span></h2>
-
-<div class="fsz7">[<span class="smcap">C<b>HARLES</b></span> <span
-class="smcap">K<b>EENE</b></span> <span class="smmaj">AND</span>
-<span class="smcap">F<b>REDERICK</b></span> <span
-class="smcap">S<b>ANDYS</b></span>]</div></div><!--chapter-->
-
-<p class="pfirst"><span class="smcap">I<b>N</b></span>
-the present chapter I propose to deal with
-three masterly drawings prepared for the pub­li­ca­tions
-of Messrs. Bradbury and Evans (the predecessors
-of Messrs. Bradbury and Agnew) which
-were suppressed for various reasons. Two of
-them are drawings by Charles Keene done for
-<i>Punch</i>, which were never even “brought to the
-block.” The third is by Frederick Sandys,
-designed for <i>Once a Week</i>, and actually engraved,
-but cancelled before pub­li­ca­tion for reasons which
-shall appear.</p>
-
-<p>For leave to reproduce the first—one of the
-rare cartoons (in this case a double-page one)
-drawn by Keene for <i>Punch</i>—I
-am indebted to <span class="xxpn" id="p128">{128}</span>
-the generosity of Messrs. Bradbury and Agnew,
-to whom the original drawing now belongs. For
-years it has hung amongst other well-nigh priceless
-treasures in the dining hall in Bouverie Street,
-Whitefriars, and, until reproduced by me in the
-<i>Pall Mall Magazine</i> in 1899, was only known
-to the privileged few whose good fortune it has
-been to penetrate into that Temple of the Comic
-Muse. It is therefore with the greater satisfaction
-that it is here reproduced for the delight
-of that surely increasing public which recognises
-in Charles Keene the greatest master of pen-and-ink
-drawing that England has produced. But
-this is not the place to linger over the qualities
-of artists. At the same time we cannot but
-congratulate ourselves that, by good fortune, our
-chosen subject brings us into contact not only
-with work to which adventitious interest attaches,
-but also with artistic work evidencing a technical
-mastery hard indeed to surpass.</p>
-
-<div class="dbigpicture" id="f1.17">
-<div class="dctr01 dhtml">
-<img src="images/i128fp.jpg" width="1243" height="800" alt="" />
-<div class="dcaption">The Cancelled Cartoon.
-(<i>By Charles Keene</i>)</div></div>
-
-<div class="dctr03 dhandheld">
-<img src="images/i128fp-epubmobi.jpg" width="800" height="1243" alt="" />
-<div class="dcaption">The Cancelled Cartoon.
-(<i>By Charles Keene</i>)</div></div></div><!--dbigpicture-->
-
-<p>The only public mention before the year 1899
-made of this splendid pen-and-ink drawing is to be
-found on page 60 of Mr. Spielmann’s monumental
-work, <i>The History of Punch</i>. There,
-in his most <span class="xxpn" id="p129">{129}</span>
-interesting description of <i>The “Punch” Dining
-Hall</i>, it is described as “a masterly drawing,
-2 feet long, by Keene, bought by the late Mr.
-Bradbury at a sale—the (unused) cartoon of
-Disraeli leading the principal financiers of the day
-in hats and frock-coats across the Red Sea.
-(‘Come along, it’s getting shallower!’)”</p>
-
-<p>Now, since this was written, further inquiries
-have been made upon the subject, and two theories
-present themselves for con­sid­er­ation. The first
-of them in its general outline supports Mr.
-Spielmann’s account, and maintains that the
-picture was bought direct from Keene himself by
-the late Mr. Agnew (not Mr. Bradbury), as a
-<i>solatium</i> on account of its not being used, and
-that the reason for suppressing it was the anti-Jewish
-feeling by which it was inspired.</p>
-
-<p>In support of this view it should be remembered
-that Keene all along refused to accept a fixed
-salary for his <i>Punch</i> work, and was always paid
-by the piece. Considering, too, that the subject
-of the weekly cartoons was (and still is) a matter
-of general discussion at the Wednesday <i>Punch</i>
-dinners, it is not unreasonable to
-suppose that the <span class="xxpn" id="p130">{130}</span>
-subject was embarked upon with the authority of
-the editor, and that other counsels only prevailed
-after the drawing had reached the stage at which
-it now appears.<a class="afnanc" href="#fn24" id="fnanc24">24</a>
-This being so, it seems not
-unlikely that a generous employer would feel
-himself in some degree answerable for the futile
-labour to which the artist had been put, and would
-offer to buy the picture as it stood rather than
-that the artist should in any way be prejudiced.
-If this were the case (which does not sound
-improbable) it throws an interesting and edifying
-side-light upon the relations existing between the
-artists and publishers of our great comic paper.</p>
-
-<div class="dftnt">
-<p class="pfirst"><a class="afnlabel" href="#fnanc24" id="fn24">24</a>
-Of course Sir John Tenniel was cartoonist in
-chief, but sometimes the cartoon was duplicated, and on
-very rare occasions Sir John took a holiday.</p></div>
-
-<p>Against this theory, however, I have the opinion
-of Sir John Tenniel and Mr. Linley Sambourne
-that the drawing was done on Keene’s own initiative
-by way of frontispiece to one of the <i>Punch</i>
-pocket-books. But this view of the matter I am,
-with submission, not myself inclined to accept,
-and for two reasons. First and foremost, the
-drawing differs in shape from the pocket-book
-folding frontispieces; and secondly,
-it was the <span class="xxpn" id="p131">{131}</span>
-practice in these yearly productions rather to
-satirise some social folly or fashion of the period
-than to deal with matters political or international.
-In addition to which it does tally in shape with
-the double-page cartoons of <i>Punch</i> itself, and, as a
-matter of fact, Keene’s few cartoons were mostly
-done during the years 1875, 1876, and 1877, when
-the matter of the Suez Canal was making a new
-departure in politics—a fact which, as will appear,
-has some bearing upon the matter before us.</p>
-
-<p>So much for the cir­cum­stances connected with
-the production and proposed destination of the
-picture. Let us now consider its subject and the
-probable reason of its sup­pres­sion.</p>
-
-<p>And, if we take down our volume of collected
-<i>Punch</i> cartoons and turn to those dealing with
-Disraeli, we shall be disinclined to think that it
-was out of any con­sid­er­ation for “Benjamin
-Bombastes” himself that this splendid drawing
-was withheld from pub­li­ca­tion. But thinly
-disguised contempt is the attitude almost invariably
-maintained towards him, whilst but
-thinly disguised personal admiration for his great
-rival discounts even the
-bitterest political taunts <span class="xxpn" id="p132">{132}</span>
-flung at that devoted head. No! I am inclined
-to think that events at this time, to which this
-cartoon referred, were wringing unwilling approbation
-even from “The Asiatic Mystery’s” most
-bitter enemies, and that Bouverie Street could
-not but acknowledge that here at least “Ben-Dizzy”
-deserved well of his country. For surely
-the cartoon has reference to nothing less than
-that crowning act of wisdom, the purchase of
-nearly half the shares in the Suez Canal for four
-millions sterling. Here we have Disraeli with
-his umbrella pointing the way, not across the Red
-Sea as Mr. Spielmann imagines, but up the Canal
-<i>towards</i> the Red Sea. He calls out, “Don’t be
-afraid! it’s getting shallower,” thus possibly referring
-to the original notion (afterwards disproved)
-that the level of the Mediterranean was 30 feet
-below that of the Red Sea. On the right-hand,
-and Egyptian, side of the water, if we look
-carefully, we discover the shadowy outline of the
-Sphinx and the Pyramids, which latter rise dimly
-to the margin of the drawing. On the bank
-indistinct forms of the Liberal “Opposition” wave
-their arms, hurl stones and shout
-“Yah” at the <span class="xxpn" id="p133">{133}</span>
-wading financiers. Such was the hardly congratulatory
-attitude assumed towards this masterly
-move by Charles Keene.</p>
-
-<p>But when we turn to the cartoons dealing with
-this subject by Sir John Tenniel,<a class="afnanc" href="#fn25" id="fnanc25">25</a>
-which <i>did</i>
-appear, what do we find? The first is “Mosé in
-Egitto”!!! published on December 11, 1875, to
-which, in the collected cartoons, the following
-note is
-<span class="nowrap">appended:—</span>“Mr. Disraeli extorted the
-admiration of the country by purchasing for
-£4,000,000, on behalf of the Government, the
-shares in the Suez Canal held by the Khedive of
-Egypt.” The second is entitled “The Lion’s
-Share—<i>Gare à qui la touche</i>,” on February 26,
-1896, to which the note appended runs: “The
-acquisition of the Suez Canal shares was accepted
-by the country as securing the safety of ‘The
-Key to India.’” These, as will be seen, frankly
-recognise the wisdom of the purchase. Hence
-it is not surprising if the feeling against the
-suggestion contained in Keene’s cartoon—that
-the financiers of the day were being
-put into a <span class="xxpn" id="p134">{134}</span>
-ridiculous position by the Conservative Leader—was
-strong enough to result in its rejection. Its
-inclusion would have gone far to stultify the effect
-of the congratulatory attitude taken up by <i>Punch’s</i>
-chartered cartoonist. At any rate, this view of
-the case appears to be most reasonable, and I give
-it for what it is worth.</p>
-
-<div class="dftnt">
-<p class="pfirst"><a class="afnlabel" href="#fnanc25" id="fn25">25</a>
-It may be mentioned as an interesting fact
-that no engraved cartoon after Sir John Tenniel has ever
-failed to find its place in the number for which it was
-designed.</p></div>
-
-<p>The drawing is a fine example of Keene’s
-power of endowing his models with the qualities
-requisite to his design. Not a man of these seventeen
-financiers suggests a model posing, and yet
-all, for this was Keene’s invariable custom, were
-drawn from the life. Not one of them but is
-balanced as though he were wading in water up
-to his knees; and yet not one of them, we may
-be sure, was wading against a stream when, probably
-unconsciously, he was forced into the service
-of the artist’s pencil. The pose of one and all is
-as inevitable as is the expression on the face of
-each. I would ask all my readers who are seekers
-after consummate draughtsmanship to give more
-particular attention to this beautiful drawing than
-its mere subject would demand, remembering that
-Keene’s achievements
-in black-and-white are <span class="xxpn" id="p135">{135}</span>
-unsurpassed, and, I am inclined to think, unsurpassable.</p>
-
-<p>We will now turn to the con­sid­er­ation of the
-other suppressed Keene drawing. This, we shall
-find, owed its rejection not to political but
-to social con­sid­er­ations. And it is of peculiar
-interest, not only as showing the scrupulous care
-taken by the then editor of <i>Punch</i> to avoid the
-risk of offending the susceptibilities of his readers,
-but also as an example of the extensive collaboration
-which existed between Keene and the late
-Mr. Joseph Crawhall in the supply of “socials”
-to that paper week by week.</p>
-
-<p>Let us pause for a moment, then, to recall the
-particulars of this remarkable co-operation. Early
-in the ’seventies, Keene, who was often gravelled
-for humorous subjects on which to exercise his
-pencil, was by good fortune introduced to the
-author of <i>Border Notes and Mixty-Maxty</i>, and
-many other droll books of a like character. This
-gentleman, always a lover of things quaint,
-grotesque and jocular, had been for years in the
-habit of jotting down any telling incident that
-came in his way, illustrating it at
-leisure for his <span class="xxpn" id="p136">{136}</span>
-own amusement. He was no great artist; but,
-like Thackeray, his inadequate pencil was so compelled
-and inspired by the appreciation of his
-subjects that he was able to set them down
-pictorially in a manner so naïve and at the same
-time so intelligent that they are a joy to the
-beholder. These suggestive drawings, by the
-time the introduction had taken place, filled
-several volumes.</p>
-
-<p>Keene’s delight, then, may be well imagined
-when he was given <i>carte blanche</i> to cull the best
-of the subjects for use in <i>Punch</i>. He
-<span class="nowrap">wrote:—</span></p>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>“I can’t tell you how strongly I have felt your rare
-generosity and unselfishness in letting me browse so freely
-in your pastures.”</p></blockquote>
-
-<p>And
-<span class="nowrap">again:—</span></p>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>“Many thanks for the loan of the sketch-books. I enjoyed
-them again and again, with renewed chucklings; but what
-a mouth-watering larder to lay open to a ravenous joke-seeker!”</p></blockquote>
-
-<div class="dbigpicture" id="f1.18">
-<div class="dctr01 dhtml">
-<img src="images/i136fp.jpg" width="1158" height="800" alt="" />
-<div class="dcaption">
-<table class="caption-table" summary="">
-<tr>
- <td>The Cancelled “Social.”
-(<i>By Charles Keene</i>)</td>
- <td>Suggestion by Joseph Crawhall for the Cancelled
-“Social”</td></tr></table>
-</div></div><!--dctr01-->
-
-<div class="dctr04 dhandheld">
-<img src="images/i136fp-a-epubmobi.jpg" width="496" height="800" alt="" />
-<div class="dcaption">The Cancelled “Social.”
-(<i>By Charles Keene</i>)</div></div>
-
-<div class="dctr03 dhandheld">
-<img src="images/i136fp-b-epubmobi.jpg" width="609" height="800" alt="" />
-<div class="dcaption">Suggestion by Joseph Crawhall for the Cancelled
-“Social”</div></div>
-</div><!--dbigpicture-->
-
-<p>Fortunately Mr. Crawhall was as delighted to
-be of service to the great artist as Keene was to
-avail himself of his opportunity. Hence we have
-that delightful partnership of
-which full particulars <span class="xxpn" id="p137">{137}</span>
-may be found in my <i>Life and Letters of Charles
-Keene of</i> “<i>Punch</i>.”</p>
-
-<p>It is necessary to say so much for the purpose
-of introducing the subject of the second
-of Keene’s cancelled drawings. By a great piece
-of good fortune I have in my possession Mr.
-Crawhall’s pictorial suggestion for the rejected
-picture itself, presented to me by the artist. I
-reproduce it here alongside Keene’s drawing for
-the purpose of comparison. The humour of it is
-certainly rather brutal, and one is not surprised
-to find that the editor considered that it would
-“jar upon feelings.” Keene, on the other hand,
-was naturally disgusted at his labour being thrown
-away, and vented his wrath somewhat unreasonably
-upon the “Philistine editor.”</p>
-
-<p>For the sake of those who would like to gain
-some idea of the personality of the artist’s friend
-who acted, as Boswell did to Johnson, in the
-capacity of a “starter of mawkins,” it may be
-mentioned that an excellent back view of Mr.
-Crawhall, drawn by Keene, appears in <i>Punch</i>,
-March 11, 1882, over the following delicious
-“legend”:— <span class="xxpn" id="p138">{138}</span></p>
-
-<blockquote class="dkeeptgth">
-<div><i>LAPSUS LINGUÆ</i></div>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">P<b>ATER:</b></span> “Now, look here, my boy, I
-can’t have these late hours. When I was your age my father wouldn’t let
-me stay out after dark.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">F<b>ILIUS:</b></span> “Humph! nice sort o’
-father you must have had, I should say.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">P<b>ATER</b></span> (<i>waxing</i>): “Deuced
-sight better than you have, you young——”
-&#xa0;&#xa0;&#xa0;(<i>Checks himself, and
-exit.</i>)</p></blockquote>
-
-<p>The original of the <i>Punch</i> drawing here reproduced
-was presented to Mr. Crawhall by Charles
-Keene. This was the latter’s method of repaying
-the former for his unqualified generosity. Mr.
-Crawhall was, however, somewhat embarrassed by
-what he considered to be excessive payment for
-services which he held required no other recompense
-than the honour thus conferred on his poor
-drawings. The result was a generous contest
-which resulted in his finally refusing to accept
-them, “For,” said he, “you don’t know the value
-of your work. The reward is too great, and our
-happy connection must cease if you put me under
-these obligations.”</p>
-
-<p>Keene, nevertheless, always afterwards made a
-colourable excuse to send them when he could
-think of one, although by this time
-he was well <span class="xxpn" id="p139">{139}</span>
-aware that he was as great a magician as the
-Old Lady of Threadneedle Street, and could by
-a few strokes of his pen make the back of an
-old envelope rival the value of one of <i>her</i> crisp
-bank-notes.</p>
-
-<p>But we must not linger over the cancelled
-drawings of an artist who, had he been as great in
-imagination as he was in originality of method
-and mastery over his pencil, would have been as
-great as the greatest in Art. It is now our
-delightful task to turn to another of the men of
-the ’sixties, whose imagination and sympathy with
-high romance has rarely been surpassed, and
-whose technical mastery, though not the equal of
-his great contemporary, was yet so dis­tin­guished
-that, even divorced from his other qualities, it
-would give him a niche in the Temple of Fame.
-Frederick Sandys has but lately left us, and
-how few there are who recognise the greatness
-of his work! For years it has been a matter of
-astonishment to me that his name was not on
-every tongue. Keene, alive, was practically unknown.
-Keene, dead, occupies an unassailable
-position. Sandys is known and
-esteemed only by <span class="xxpn" id="p140">{140}</span>
-the few. The time will come when his pictures
-will be a fashionable craze, and every woodcut
-after him, whether it be in <i>Once a Week</i>, <i>The
-Cornhill</i>, <i>Good Words</i>, <i>London Society</i>, <i>The
-Churchman’s Family Magazine</i>, <i>The Shilling
-Magazine</i>, <i>The Quiver</i>, <i>The Argosy</i>, or what not,
-will be eagerly appropriated by those who wish
-to pass as discerning dilettanti.</p>
-
-<p>But we must not generalise, for our concern is
-here with one particular design, and enthusiasm
-must not be allowed to run. Done for <i>Once a
-Week</i>, and cut exquisitely on the wood by Swain,
-that with which we have to do was at the last
-moment cancelled by a timidly fastidious editor.</p>
-
-<p>If we turn to page 672 of vol. iv. of <i>Once
-a Week</i> (new series), 1867, we shall find the
-following set of verses, signed “W.,” the origin
-and authorship of which I am now able to make
-public:—</p>
-
-<div class="dpoemlft">
-<div class="dstanzalft">
-<p class="pfirst"><span class="smcap">D<b>ANAË</b></span></p>
-<span class="spp03">The hour of noonday sleep was o’er,</span>
-<span class="spp03">And Danaë dreamt her dream no more;</span>
-<span class="spp00">Yet still its image lingered on her loom;</span>
-<span class="spp03">For there in woven colours bright,</span>
-<span class="spp03">And touched to life by purpling light,</span>
-<span class="spp00">Smiled the one godhead of the captive’s room.
-<span class="xxpn" id="p141">{141}</span></span>
-<span class="spp03">She raised her from the Tyrian sheet,</span>
-<span class="spp03">And clasped her sandals on her feet,</span>
-<span class="spp00">And lightly drew around her virgin zone;</span>
-<span class="spp03">And sighed—and knew not why she sighed;</span>
-<span class="spp03">And murmured, while her work she plied,</span>
-<span class="spp00">“The World may leave my love and me alone.”</span>
-<span class="spp00">Thus sang the maiden of the brazen tower,</span>
-<span class="spp00">And longed, unconscious, for the golden shower.</span>
-</div><div class="dstanzalft">
-<span class="spp03">“The days and months have grown to years,</span>
-<span class="spp03">And I have dried my childish tears,</span>
-<span class="spp00">And half forgotten why they ever ran;</span>
-<span class="spp03">My soul is plighted to the sky,</span>
-<span class="spp03">And we,—my wrinkled nurse and I,—</span>
-<span class="spp00">What matter if we see no more of man?</span>
-<span class="spp03">She wearies me with omens dire,</span>
-<span class="spp03">My son foredoomed to kill my sire,—</span>
-<span class="spp00">But sire and son are empty names to me.</span>
-<span class="spp03">My love! I only rest awhile,</span>
-<span class="spp03">To dream the beauty of thy smile.</span>
-<span class="spp00">And only wake again to picture thee.”</span>
-<span class="spp00">Thus sang the maiden of the brazen tower,</span>
-<span class="spp00">And longed, unconscious, for the golden shower.</span>
-</div><div class="dstanzalft">
-<span class="spp03">She ceased: for now began to fade</span>
-<span class="spp03">The figure of that mighty shade,</span>
-<span class="spp00">With loins and shoulders meet to sway the world;</span>
-<span class="spp03">And awful through the gloom appeared</span>
-<span class="spp03">His massive locks of hair and beard,</span>
-<span class="spp00">Like clouds in lurid light of thunder curled.</span>
-<span class="spp03">Yet, long as twilight glimmered there,</span>
-<span class="spp03">She gazed upon a vision fair;</span>
-<span class="spp00">His brow more beautiful than Parian stone,</span>
-<span class="spp03">And nestling nearer like a dove,</span>
-<span class="spp03">Soft on his lips she breathed her love,
-<span class="xxpn" id="p142">{142}</span></span>
-<span class="spp00">And lit his eyes with lustre of her own.</span>
-<span class="spp00">Then passion stung the maiden of the tower,</span>
-<span class="spp00">And fast she panted for the golden shower.</span>
-</div><div class="dstanzalft">
-<span class="spp03">She stood, with white arm fixed in air,</span>
-<span class="spp03">And head thrown back, and streaming hair,</span>
-<span class="spp00">“Oh, Lord of Dreams!” she cried, “dost thou behold?”</span>
-<span class="spp03">Then thunderous music shook the cell,</span>
-<span class="spp03">And, sliding through the rafters, fell</span>
-<span class="spp00">On Danaë’s burning breast, three drops of gold.</span>
-<span class="spp03">Her bosom thrilled—but not with pain:—</span>
-<span class="spp03">Faster and brighter flowed the rain,</span>
-<span class="spp00">And starred with light the chamber of the bride:</span>
-<span class="spp03">Her cheek sank blushing on her hand,</span>
-<span class="spp03">Her eyelids drooped, her silken band</span>
-<span class="spp00">Unloosed itself,—and Jove was at her side.</span>
-<span class="spp00">Black loured the earth around the captive’s tower,</span>
-<span class="spp00">But Heaven embraced her in the golden shower.</span>
-</div></div>
-
-<p>I insert the poem here, as it constitutes the
-only trace in the pages of <i>Once a Week</i> of the
-matter with which we have to deal.</p>
-
-<p>Before proceeding to detail the cir­cum­stances connected
-with the production and final sup­pres­sion of the engraving,
-which prompted this passable set of verses, I shall
-endeavour to correct certain statements regarding it which
-have gained currency. In the <i>Artist</i> monograph on “The Art
-of Frederick Sandys,” in 1896, we find a few lines only
-given to the con­sid­er­ation of the <span class="xxpn" id="p144">{144}</span>
-wood-engraving
-of “Danaë in the Brazen Chamber”; but in these few lines
-we have one undoubtedly incorrect statement, and another
-which is open to the gravest suspicion. The first is that
-the “Danaë” was engraved for <i>The Hobby Horse</i> in 1888; the
-second that it was drawn for <i>Once a Week</i> in 1860.</p>
-
-<div class="dbigpicture" id="f2.19">
-<div class="dctr03 dhtml">
-<img src="images/i143.jpg" width="800" height="1227" alt="" />
-<div class="dcaption">Danaë in the Brazen Chamber</div></div>
-
-<div class="dctr03 dhandheld">
-<img src="images/i143-epubmobi.jpg" width="700" height="1073" alt="" />
-<div class="dcaption">Danaë in the Brazen Chamber</div></div>
-</div><!--dbigpicture-->
-
-<p>As regards its engraving, this was done by
-Swain for <i>Once a Week</i>, when the drawing was
-sent in. That it was first <i>published</i> in <i>The Hobby
-Horse</i> as an illus­tra­tion to an article by the late
-J. M. Gray is another matter altogether. As
-regards the date of its design, 1860 is almost
-certainly some years too early. Indeed, I had
-it from Sandys himself that the probable date of
-the <i>first sketch</i> of the subject was as late as 1865,
-and that it was not till after he had traced it on
-a panel<a class="afnanc" href="#fn26" id="fnanc26">26</a>
-(the figure some two feet high) for a
-never-completed oil-painting, and later had made
-a chalk-drawing of it for a Yorkshire gentleman,
-that he decided to make a drawing on the wood
-at all. This being done, its beauty prompted two
-poems by two of his personal
-friends, the one <span class="xxpn" id="p145">{145}</span>
-given above by Mr. Ward, the other, so far as
-I can gather never published, by Colonel Alfred
-Richards. Now, the fact that Mr. Ward’s poem
-did not appear in <i>Once a Week</i> till 1867 lends
-such overwhelming weight to Mr. Sandys’s recollection
-of the matter that we may, I think,
-unhesitatingly reject the date of 1860 given by
-the author of the <i>Artist</i> monograph and adopt a
-date at least five years later. Further evidence,
-too, is to be found in the fact that Mr. Sandys
-continued to draw on the wood certainly as late
-as 1866, and his recollection is clear as to “Danaë”
-being his last essay in that medium.</p>
-
-<p>I have been thus particular to correct this
-matter because it will, I believe, prove of importance,
-when Sandys’s artistic career comes finally
-to be described, to get his different productions
-into chronological order for a proper understanding
-of his artistic development.</p>
-
-<p>So far, then, we have arrived, at any rate approximately, at the
-date when Sandys did what proved to be not only his one “suppressed”
-drawing, but, as I have said, the very last drawing done by him on the
-wood. <span class="xxpn" id="p146">{146}</span></p>
-
-<p>Let us now consider the cir­cum­stances under
-which it was produced for, but in the event suppressed
-by, the editor of <i>Once a Week</i>. And that
-this periodical is the poorer for its loss will be
-obvious to all who love beautiful drawing, “splendid
-paganism,” and fine wood-engraving.</p>
-
-<p>Sandys began to draw for <i>Once a Week</i> in 1861,
-his initial effort being that splendid design, “Yet
-once more on the Organ play,” which is fit to rank
-with Rethel’s “Der Tod als Freund,” with which
-there is a certain similarity of sentiment. This
-was followed by eleven drawings within the five
-succeeding years, all breathing the spirit of Dürer,
-and carrying on the effort which Rethel, who had
-only died in 1859, had made to renew the life put
-into wood-engraving by the old German master.
-In either 1865 or 1866 Sandys projected an oil
-picture on the subject of “Danaë in the Brazen
-Chamber.” He had conceived a new version of
-the Danaë legend. Instead of Jove appearing
-to the imprisoned maiden in the form of a golden
-shower, he adopted the belief in Jove as the God
-of Dreams and adapted it to
-the legend.<a class="afnanc" href="#fn27" id="fnanc27">27</a>
-Danaë, <span class="xxpn" id="p147">{147}</span>
-who has never seen a man, is haunted by the
-appearance of Jove as he has presented himself
-in her sleeping hours. To comfort herself and
-satisfy her passionate longing she has spent her
-days in weaving the image so vouchsafed to her
-in tapestry. For the moment her work is discarded.
-The ball of wool with which she has
-been working lies at her feet, and she stands,
-“with white arm fixed in air,” calling upon the
-“Lord of Dreams” to come to her in very sooth.</p>
-
-<div class="dftnt">
-<p class="pfirst"><a class="afnlabel" href="#fnanc26" id="fn26">26</a>
-This is now, I believe, in the
-possession of Mr. Ashby-Sterry.</p>
-
-<p class="pfirst padtopc"><a class="afnlabel" href="#fnanc27" id="fn27">27</a>
-καὶ γὰρ τ’ ὄναρ ἐκ Διός ἐστιν.—Homer,
-<i>Iliad</i> i. 63.</p></div>
-
-<p>Frankly sensuous as is the picture, one cannot
-but admit that the theme is treated with all
-necessary restraint. This, however, does not
-appear to have been the opinion of Walford, the
-then editor of <i>Once a Week</i>. He wrote to Sandys
-requiring a modification of the design. This the
-artist flatly refused. The design must appear
-as it was or not at all. In this refusal he was
-gallantly supported by the proprietors of the
-periodical, Messrs. Bradbury and Evans. The
-editor, however, would not give way, and the
-result was a deadlock. The block was actually
-engraved by Mr. Swain, and in his best manner,
-but the editor’s will was paramount,
-and it never <span class="xxpn" id="p148">{148}</span>
-adorned the pages for which it was intended. It
-was reserved to the <i>Century Guild Hobby Horse</i>,
-in 1888, to rescue it from the oblivion into which
-it had passed.</p>
-
-<p>I am indebted to Messrs. Bradbury and Agnew
-for permission to reproduce the design. Of it
-Mr. J. M. Gray says in his article on “Frederick
-Sandys and the Woodcut Designers of Thirty
-Years Ago”:—“It ranks among the very finest
-of Sandys’s woodcuts,” and the artist, who had
-not been uniformly satisfied with the engraved
-versions of his work, himself wrote to me: “It
-was engraved for <i>Once a Week</i>. Perfectly cut by
-Swain. From my point of view the best piece
-of woodcutting of our time.”</p>
-
-<p>And all who love this beautiful but fast disappearing handmaiden of
-the arts will heartily endorse Mr. Sandys’s opinion.</p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="h2herein" id="p149">CHAPTER VIII
-
-<span class="h2smallctr">MISCELLANEOUS</span></h2></div>
-
-<p class="pfirst">I <span class="smmaj">PROPOSE</span> in this chapter
-to group together cer­tain spor­a­dic sup­pres­sions in lith­o­graphy,
-etching, wood-engraving, and pro­cess work. They are not suf­ficiently
-important each to demand a chapter to itself, nor do they fall into any
-particular categories as do the “Dickens,” “Hogarth,” and “Cruikshank”
-plates. At the same time each has an interest of its own, and is a
-footprint upon the byway of art with which we are concerned.</p>
-
-<p>Fortunately for us the first of these cancelled
-illus­tra­tions is, at a time when we have but lately
-been celebrating the centenary of Senefelder’s
-great invention, lithography, of ex­traor­di­nary
-interest, for it was one of the earliest book illus­tra­tions
-produced in England by
-this method. The <span class="xxpn" id="p150">{150}</span>
-volume in which it appears (if we are lucky enough
-to possess one of the first three hundred copies
-issued) is the <i>Antiquities of Westminster</i>, with
-two hundred and forty-six engravings by J. T.
-Smith.</p>
-
-<p>The date of the volume is 1807—a fact which
-would at first sight seem to tell against our claim
-to be dealing with a pioneer English lithograph.
-We must, however, remember that a book of this
-kind took many years to produce, and that the
-pub­li­ca­tion of the illus­tra­tions was, in many cases,
-of necessity years later than their execution.</p>
-
-<p>Lowndes oddly refers to the lithograph as the
-first “<i>stone-plate</i>” ever attempted, but in this he
-claims for it too great a distinction. To name
-no others, there was, we know, as early as 1803 a
-portfolio containing drawings by West, Fuseli,
-Barry, and Stothard issued as <i>Specimens of
-Polyautography</i>, by which term lithography was
-for a few years described, which contains lithographs
-dated 1801 and 1802.</p>
-
-<div class="dctr01" id="f1.19">
-<img src="images/i150fp.jpg" width="800" height="950" alt="" />
-<div class="dcaption">“The Painted Chamber.”<br />
-(From <i>Antiquities of Westminster</i>, 1807.)</div></div>
-
-<p>The subject of the design here reproduced in
-facsimile is the inside of the Painted Chamber
-which was part of the Old
-Palace of Westminster. <span class="xxpn" id="p151">{151}</span>
-The mural paintings which were discovered at
-the beginning of this century, after the removal
-of the tapestry hangings which are to be seen in
-the lithograph, were, it will scarcely be credited,
-promptly ordered by the authorities of the day
-to be “improved” away by a coat of whitewash
-because of their untidiness! And this although
-they were known to have been in existence since
-1322, and although there were strong reasons for
-the belief even at that time that they were
-executed as early as the reign of Henry III.!
-Such an act of vandalism would be inconceivable
-were it not that we have learnt to look upon its
-like as so lamentably common.</p>
-
-<p>The account of the preparation of the lithograph,
-and of the stone’s untimely fate, is fully set
-forth on pages 49 and 50 of the <i>Antiquities</i>.
-It is too long to quote in this place, but is well
-worth looking up by those who are interested in
-the history of this method. It is sufficient for our
-purpose to say that after three hundred impressions
-had been taken off, the stone was laid
-by for the night without care having been taken
-to keep it properly moist. The
-result was that <span class="xxpn" id="p152">{152}</span>
-on the application of the ink balls in the morning
-they proved too tenacious, and on their removal
-were found to have torn up portions of the drawing
-from the stone. Consequently we have it
-that impressions of this, one of the first English
-lithographs, are exceedingly scarce, and are only
-to be found in the first three hundred copies of
-the book issued. This fact connotes the further
-result that the impressions of the etchings throughout
-the book in their earliest states are to be found
-in the copies containing the lithograph.</p>
-
-<p>Before quitting this subject it should be stated
-that in “collating” this book we must bear in
-mind a very pretty quarrel which took place
-between the artist and J. S. Hawkins, who was
-largely responsible for the letterpress. As has
-been pointed out, the first 300 copies contained the
-“stone-plate.” But in only a very few copies is
-to be found the suppressed title-page bearing the
-name of John Sidney Hawkins, and the dedication
-to George III., signed “The Author.” These
-few copies contain the very earliest impressions
-of the plates. In the later copies the dedication
-is signed “John Thomas Smith,”
-and bound up <span class="xxpn" id="p153">{153}</span>
-in most of these is found a “Vindication” by
-J. T. Smith in answer to “A Correct Statement
-and Vindication of the conduct of John Sidney
-Hawkins, Esq., F.A.S., towards Mr. John Thomas
-Smith, drawn up and published by Mr. Hawkins
-himself.” Lond. 1807, 8vo, p. 87. J. T. Smith’s
-answer was further replied to in another pamphlet
-by Hawkins dated 1808.</p>
-
-<p>We will now turn from this specimen of
-lithography to a very remarkable example of the
-sister art of wood-engraving. (<i>Vide</i> Frontispiece.)</p>
-
-<p>In the April number 1896 of <i>Good Words</i>, I
-dealt with some bibliographical curiosities, one of
-which was the remarkable suppressed title-page
-in my possession here reproduced. My object on
-that occasion was to verify the fact of which I
-felt practically certain, that the book for which it
-was prepared had never come into being, and that
-therefore we had the curious anomaly of an
-elaborately engraved title-page wanting a book.
-Books wanting their engraved title-page are
-unfortunately common enough, owing to the
-barbarism of certain ruthless collectors. But a
-title-page not only wanting a
-book, but which <span class="xxpn" id="p154">{154}</span>
-never had one, was as ex­traor­di­nary as the grin of
-the Cheshire Cat in <i>Alice in Wonderland</i>, which
-was left behind after its author had disappeared.</p>
-
-<p>“Well! I’ve often seen a cat without a
-grin,” thought Alice, “but a grin without a cat!
-It’s the most curious thing I ever saw in all my
-life.”</p>
-
-<p>But then Alice had never seen this title-page
-of a book by “Sholto Percy” which was never
-written, and of which <i>Death in London</i> was to
-have been the title. The wood-block is a very
-beautiful one, cut by Mason, no doubt Abraham
-John, who engraved Cruikshank’s illus­tra­tions to
-<i>Tales of Humour and Gallantry</i>.</p>
-
-<p>“Sholto Percy” was the pen-name of Joseph
-Clinton Robertson, who, with Thomas Byerley,
-published the <i>Percy Anecdotes</i>, 1821–23. Their
-full pseudonyms were “Sholto and Reuben Percy,
-Brothers of the Benedictine Monastery, Mount
-Benger.” The anecdotes were published in forty-one
-parts, at half-a-crown a-piece, before the close
-of the year 1823, and, of these, two hundred and
-sixty thousand copies were sold during the four
-years of issue! What
-number subsequent editions <span class="xxpn" id="p155">{155}</span>
-have run to it is impossible to conjecture. The
-title of the book had its origin from the Percy
-Coffee-House in Rathbone Place, which the
-collaborators frequented. They also compiled
-<i>London, or Interesting Memorials of its Rise,
-Progress, and Present State</i>. 3 vols. 1823.</p>
-
-<p>In the dedication of this last work to George
-IV. we find facsimile signatures of the two
-“Brothers.” That of “Sholto Percy,” the author
-of the book which was evidently projected but
-never published, tallies with that on the title-page
-here reproduced. From the fact that Reuben’s
-signature is absent we gather that, for some
-reason or other, the collaboration had come to an
-end. At any rate nothing more is heard of the
-partnership, nor indeed was anything else published
-under one or other of these <i>noms-de-plume</i>. And
-although I received various communications from
-strangers upon the subject of the bibliographical
-curiosities dealt with in the <i>Good Words</i> article,
-no light was thrown upon this perplexing title-page.
-Suppressed, therefore, it doubtless was,
-because it had no reason to be anything else, and
-remains a rather pathetic memorial
-of the gifted <span class="xxpn" id="p156">{156}</span>
-artist and the author whose projected enterprise
-was perchance cut short by one of the forms of
-the Dread Enemy here portrayed.</p>
-
-<p>The block is worthy of careful scrutiny. The
-only impression in existence (as I believe it to be)
-and in my possession is beautifully printed on
-India paper. In it we find Bewick’s white line
-used with excellent effect. Behind the main panel
-the colossal form of Death is just visible, holding
-in either hand “Death in the Cup” and “Death
-in the Dish.” At the lower corners his skeleton
-feet are just visible, fixed on the Arctic and
-Antarctic portions of the Globe. At the top of
-the panel Death drags a wheel off the chariot
-which is making a dash from London to Gretna
-Green. Immediately below this is a nail-studded
-coffin from which hangs a pall inscribed with the
-words “Death in London.” This overhangs the
-central group, in which Death spectacled and
-seated on a tombstone at a desk supported by
-human thighs, with a human skull as footstool,
-receives despatches and directs his myrmidons.
-Supporting this central panel two skeletons hurl
-death-dealing darts, whilst
-below one skeleton <span class="xxpn" id="p157">{157}</span>
-starves in prison, and another, crowned with straw,
-rages as a maniac.</p>
-
-<p>On the right-hand border a skeleton highwayman,
-pistol in hand, awaits his victim, ignoring the
-gallows which is seen under the moon in the background,
-and ignorant of the noose already round
-his neck, manipulated by a skeleton hangman in
-the division above. On the left-hand border a
-somewhat cryptic design represents a skeleton
-toper surmounting a skeleton quack physician who
-sucks a cane and, with medicine bottle in hand,
-goes forth on his death-dealing mission.</p>
-
-<p>At the base Death, in a deluge of wind and
-rain, overturns a sailing boat, and incidentally
-presses down a struggling victim with his foot.
-The whole effect is finely decorative, and far
-surpasses anything else of Seymour’s of which I
-have knowledge.</p>
-
-<p>But we must not linger too long over each item
-of our promiscuous collection of cancelled illus­tra­tions.</p>
-
-<p>I shall now bring to your notice a very rare
-coloured plate by Henry Alken, which, though
-not suppressed in the strictest
-sense, is yet <span class="xxpn" id="p158">{158}</span>
-sufficiently relevant to the subject to admit of its
-inclusion in these papers. It was undoubtedly
-prepared for a book of which Alken was the
-illustrator, but, for some reason or other, although
-engraved, it was not included among the published
-plates.</p>
-
-<p>During the years 1831–39 there appeared in
-<i>The New Sporting Magazine</i>, edited by R. Surtees,
-a series of sporting sketches of which “Mr. John
-Jorrocks” was the hero. These papers were
-collected and published in 1838 under the
-alliterative title of <i>Jorrocks’s Jaunts and Jollities</i>,
-il­lus­trat­ed by “Phiz.” This volume was brought
-to the notice of Lockhart, who thereupon advised
-Surtees to try his hand at a sporting novel. The
-immediate result was <i>Handley Cross</i>. In 1843 a
-third edition of <i>Jorrocks’s Jaunts and Jollities</i>
-appeared, with sixteen coloured plates after Henry
-Alken. The novels in the meantime were being
-issued with illus­tra­tions by Leech and “Phiz.”
-That the former has at this distance of time lost
-nothing of its popularity (rather, of course, on
-account of the illus­tra­tions than for the letterpress,
-which reads poorly enough now)
-is evidenced by <span class="xxpn" id="p159">{159}</span>
-the fact that only the other day a copy fetched at
-public auction the remarkable sum of £20. One
-wonders what the bidding would have reached had
-the book been extra-il­lus­trat­ed with the unused
-illus­tra­tion of which it is here my purpose to treat.</p>
-
-<p>Now we must be careful, in considering any
-work signed “Alken,” to bear in mind the fact
-mentioned by Mr. R. E. Graves in the <i>Dictionary
-of National Biography</i>, that although the fertility
-of Alken’s pencil was amazing, the idea of it might
-be fictitiously enhanced if the fact were not grasped
-that he left two or three sons—one of whom was
-also named Henry—all artists and all sporting
-artists, who have, since their father’s time, been
-incessantly painting, lithographing, aquatinting
-and etching for the sporting publishers and for
-private patrons of the turf.</p>
-
-<p>But the original Henry Alken did his work
-between 1816 and 1831; hence it is clear that the
-illus­tra­tions to <i>Jorrocks</i> were the work of Henry
-the younger. And this is a point which should be emphasised
-for the guidance of the bibliomaniac, for
-it is the practice of many second-hand booksellers
-to lump all work by “Alken” under
-one head, from <span class="xxpn" id="p160">{160}</span>
-ignorance possibly—in some cases I fear from
-unworthy motives. For it is the work of Henry
-Alken, the founder of the line, which is of greatest
-rarity and greatest merit, and to palm off work
-done by a namesake as work done by him is
-plain cheating. We remember the parallel case
-of George Cruikshank, who exposed a certain
-publisher, in a somewhat intemperate pamphlet
-afterwards suppressed, entitled <i>A Popgun fired
-off by George Cruikshank, etc., etc.</i> In that
-case the publisher had been guilty of the more
-than questionable proceeding of advertising certain
-“story-books” as “il­lus­trat­ed by Cruikshank,”
-which were in reality the work of George’s
-nephew, Percy, who, I fancy, would have been
-the last to concur in what was an undoubted
-attempt to mislead the public.<a class="afnanc" href="#fn28" id="fnanc28">28</a></p>
-
-<div class="dftnt">
-<p class="pfirst"><a class="afnlabel" href="#fnanc28" id="fn28">28</a>
-The woodcut of the irascible George suspending
-the unhappy Brooks by the nose from a pair of tongs is
-reproduced in my little book on <i>Cruikshank’s Portraits of
-Himself</i>.</p></div>
-
-<div class="dctr03" id="f1.20">
-<img src="images/i160fp.jpg" width="799" height="1268" alt="" />
-<div class="dcaption">The suppressed portrait of “John Jorrocks,
-Esq., M.F.H., etc.” (<i>By Henry Alken, the younger</i>)</div></div>
-
-<p>Let it be clearly understood, then, that the
-plate which we here reproduce was the work of
-Henry Alken the younger. Though of little
-artistic merit, it is yet not unworthy of those
-which were published, and the
-reason of its <span class="xxpn" id="p161">{161}</span>
-sup­pres­sion is difficult to fathom. The plate
-should be undoubtedly annexed, on its very rare
-appearance, by him who values his <i>Jorrocks</i>.
-This would make his copy, in the words of the
-second-hand booksellers, a “really desirable” one.
-Our re­pro­duc­tion is not quite the size of the
-original, which exactly tallies in size and shape
-with the published plates. The line of pub­li­ca­tion
-runs: “London, Published by R. Ackermann at
-his Eclipse Sporting Gallery, 191 Regent St.
-1843.” The method employed in its production
-is a mixture of etching and aquatinting, and this
-impression has been coloured by hand with the
-brilliant tints which appealed to our sporting
-forebears. There need be no complaint about its
-lowness of tone. It would put to the blush the
-most versi-coloured of kaleidoscopes! To parody
-Dr. Johnson’s animadversion upon a certain ode,
-it would be just from the strict artistic standpoint
-to say, “Bolder colour and more timorous meaning,
-I think, were rarely brought together.”</p>
-
-<hr class="hrblk" />
-
-<p>So much for some unattached sup­pres­sions of
-the first half of the century.
-We will conclude <span class="xxpn" id="p162">{162}</span>
-this chapter with certain cancelled plates of only
-yesterday.</p>
-
-<p>To those who have not yet grasped the fact
-(cried aloud in the wilderness by Mr. Kipling)
-that our age is as romantic as any other if we
-only know how to regard matters, the fact will
-probably come as something of a surprise that the
-last decade of the nineteenth century has as surely
-its crop of “suppressed plates,” as have those ages
-which were, we choose to flatter ourselves, more
-brutal than our own. Less unmannerly in some
-respects doubtless we tend to become, and that
-perhaps is the very reason (paradoxical though it
-may sound) why we do not have to search in
-vain for “modern instances.” For now that Mrs.
-Grundy is sharper-eyed than she was (not­with­stand­ing
-her age), and the libel laws are more
-closely knit by precedents, slips which would have
-been treated as passing peccadilloes by our less
-squeamish forebears rise to the dignity of “copy”
-for the pressman, and form staple conversation for
-the insatiate tea-table.</p>
-
-<p>And when we mention the late most five-o’clock
-and kind-hearted of artists, Mr.
-du Maurier, and <span class="xxpn" id="p163">{163}</span>
-the still living most dainty limner of hoops and
-patches, Mr. Hugh Thomson, as the providers
-of century-end “cancelled illus­tra­tions,” we may
-be sure that the details will not be very scandalous,
-nor the outrages very shocking.</p>
-
-<p>Not but that I was forced to go somewhat warily
-when originally recording the famous incident of
-du Maurier and the peccant illus­tra­tion of the
-“Two Apprentices” in <i>Trilby</i>, for was I not thereby
-involving myself with another, and greater, artist
-(very much alive indeed!), whose pen was only not
-mightier than his pencil because the latter was
-unsurpassable, but who might in turn pillory me
-in his gallery of artfully constructed Enemies?</p>
-
-<p>It was indeed a topsy-turvy world which found
-the “Butterfly,” which is popularly supposed to
-end its life wriggling upon the pin of the “soaring
-human boy,” revenging itself upon humanity with
-epigrams that “stick for ever.”</p>
-
-<p>Sad to relate, Whistler could never be brought
-to see du Maurier’s rather caustic “retaliation,”
-particulars of which are given below, in its proper
-proportions. Indeed, when I asked him to allow
-me to reproduce, as a
-pictorial curiosity, the <span class="xxpn" id="p164">{164}</span>
-suppressed print of the “Two Apprentices,” which
-only the owners of <i>Trilby</i>, as it appeared in
-serial form, are now destined to possess, he informed
-me in the politest manner possible that
-my doing so would involve me in an expensive
-and uncomfortable correspondence with his
-solicitors. And what could not be done then
-cannot be done now, for reasons into which I need
-not enter. Nevertheless, to treat seriously a hyperbolical
-and exaggerated caricature as anything more
-than a legitimate response to a not altogether
-kindly sarcasm on the part of Mr. Whistler himself,
-appears to me now, as it appeared to me
-then, well-nigh incredible. No one looked upon
-“Joe Sibley” as a true likeness, either pictorially or
-verbally. It was written and read as a joke, part
-true, but mostly false, and so would have stood
-had it not been given undue importance by the
-correspondence in the <i>Pall Mall Gazette</i>. As a
-result, in book form “Joe Sibley” is wanting in
-that delightful gallery which contains “Durier,”
-Pygmalion to Trilby’s Galatea—a Galatea whose
-marble heart would never beat for him; “Vincent,”
-the great American oculist,
-“whose daughters are <span class="xxpn" id="p165">{165}</span>
-so beautiful and accomplished that they spend
-their autumn holiday in refusing the matrimonial
-offers of the British aristocracy”; “The Greek,”
-who was christened Poluphoisboiospaleapologos
-Petrilopetrolicoconose “because his real name
-was thought much too long”; “Carnegie,”
-who “is now only a rural dean, and speaks the
-worst French I know, and speaks it wherever
-and whenever he can”; “Antony, the Swiss”
-(substituted for “Joe Sibley”); “Lorrimer,” who
-was so thoroughgoing in his worship of the
-immortals, Veronese, Tintoret and Co., and was
-“so persistent in voicing it, that he made them
-quite unpopular in the Place St. Anatole des
-Arts”; not to speak of “Dodor” and “l’Zouzou,”
-who were dis­tin­guished for being “<i>les plus mauvais
-garniments</i> of their respective regiments,” and the
-rest of Trilby’s delightful adorers. Why, it seems
-to me that to have obtained a niche in that pillory
-(forgive the mixing of metaphors), and to see the
-fun of a little exaggerated banter, and perchance
-learn a little lesson from it, would not be so
-very bad a fate after all. But I suppose it all
-depends on the
-point of view. <span class="xxpn" id="p166">{166}</span></p>
-
-<p>As I say, I have by me a delightfully ironic
-missive from the late president of the Society of the
-Butterfly himself, acknowledging “the exceedingly
-amiable and flattering form of the playful request”
-contained in my letter, with a hint at the end that
-lawyers might look upon any re­pro­duc­tion of the
-forbidden matter as less than tolerable.</p>
-
-<p>Alas! that it is so, and all I can do is to refer
-my readers to the columns of the <i>Pall Mall
-Gazette</i> for May 15 and 25, 1894, in which
-appeared Whistler’s two letters, and quote here
-the interview with du Maurier upon the matter.
-They form a curious commentary upon the
-“Gentle Art of Losing—Friends.”</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-<div class="dkeeptgth">
-<div>Extract from <i>Pall Mall Gazette</i>, May 19, 1894.<a class="afnanc"
-href="#fn29" id="fnanc29" title="to note 29">&#x2a;</a></div>
-
-<div class="padtopc"><span class="smcap">M<b>R.</b></span> <span
-class="smcap">W<b>HISTLER</b></span> <span class="smmaj">AND</span>
-<span class="smcap">M<b>R.</b></span> <span class="smmaj">DU</span>
-<span class="smcap">M<b>AURIER</b></span> <span
-class="smmaj">THE</span> <span class="smcap">“P<b>UNCH”</b></span>
-<span class="smcap">A<b>RTIST’S</b></span> <span
-class="smcap">A<b>TTITUDE</b></span></div>
-
-<p class="padtopc">Mr. George du Maurier, “hidden in Hampstead” as Mr.
-Whist­ler put it in his let­ter to us a day or two ago, was
-dis­covered by a <i>Pall Mall Gazette</i> reporter without the aid
-of any ex­ploring party yes­ter­day, when that rep­re­sen­ta­tive
-called to see what the famous <i>Punch</i> artist had to say in
-reply to Mr. Whistler. Mr. du Maurier was not disposed
-at first to vouchsafe any answer. “If a
-bargee insults one <span class="xxpn" id="p167">{167}</span>
-in the street,” he said, “one can only pass on. One cannot
-stop and argue it out.” But on second thoughts Mr. du
-Maurier added a few words. “I should,” he said, “have
-avoided all reference to Mr. Whistler, or anything which
-could have been construed into reference to him, if I had
-imagined it would have pained him. I should have written
-privately to him to say so, if his letter had been less violent
-and less brutal. Certainly, in the character of Sibley, in
-my serial story <i>Trilby</i> I have drawn certain lines with Mr.
-Whistler in my mind. I thought that the reference to
-those matters would have recalled some of the good times
-we used to have in Paris in the old days. I thought that
-both with Mr. Whistler and with other ac­quain­tances I
-have similarly treated, pleasurable re­col­lec­tions would have
-been awakened. But he has taken the matter so terribly
-seriously. It is so unlike him.</p></div><!--dkeeptgth-->
-
-<div class="dftnt">
-<p class="pfirst"><a class="afnlabel" href="#fnanc29" id="fn29">&#x2a;</a>
-By kind permission of the Proprietor.</p></div>
-
-<p>“You know of no reason why he should not have taken
-it all good-naturedly?”—“No. I thought it might have
-drawn from him something funny, something droll, to which
-I could have replied in kind. But, of course, a letter like
-his puts a reply out of the question. I think he must have
-been quite out of sorts to have allowed himself to get so
-angered.” “I believe Mr. Whistler has himself said things
-which the objects of them have not particularly relished!”
-“Why, he has gone about all his life in England making
-unkind remarks and publishing them. Here is a little book
-of his, <i>The Gentle Art of making Enemies</i>, and I am one of
-his victims. It is not very terrible what he says. It is
-rather droll. Listen! ‘Mr. du Maurier and Mr. Wilde,
-happening to meet in the rooms where Mr.
-Whistler was <span class="xxpn" id="p168">{168}</span>
-holding his first exhibition of Venice jottings, the latter
-brought the two face to face, and, taking each by the arm,
-inquired, “I say, which one of you two invented the other,
-eh?”’ The obvious retort to that on my part would have
-been that if he did not take care I would invent him, but
-he had slipped away before either of us could get a word
-out. This is really too small a matter to refer to; but the
-explanation of this bit of drollery of Mr. Whistler’s is that
-it suggested that I was unknown until I began to draw
-Postlethwaite, the æsthetic character, out of whom I got
-some fun. Postlethwaite was said to be Mr. Oscar Wilde,
-but the character was founded, not on one person at all,
-but a whole school. As a matter of fact, I had been drawing
-for <i>Punch</i> twenty years before the invention of Postlethwaite.
-However, that was Mr. Whistler’s little joke, and one would
-have thought that if he made jokes about me, he might
-have expected me to play the same game upon him without
-anticipating that I should hurt his feelings. Then Mr.
-Whistler implies that I am a foul friend, stating that I
-have thought a foul friend a finer fellow than an open enemy.
-I am neither his friend nor his enemy. I am a great admirer
-of his genius and his wit; but I cannot say that I could call
-myself his friend for thirty years past. We were intimate in
-the old days, but that is all. No, his whole letter is incomprehensible
-to me. Of course, he has been embittered
-through life, by reason of his genius not being recognised at
-its full value by the wide public, and it certainly has not.
-This cir­cum­stance, and possibly illness, may account for the
-leave he has taken of good manners. He talks of my pent-up
-envy and malice. I must ask you to believe
-that I am not <span class="xxpn" id="p169">{169}</span>
-such a beast as that. I have no occasion either for malice
-or for envy, and, as I say, I should never have written even
-what I have, had I imagined it would give Mr. Whistler pain.”</p>
-
-<p>“Do you contemplate deleting the character of Sibley
-when you publish in volume form?” “If I had a word or
-sign of regret from Mr. Whistler for the savage things he
-says in his letter I might consider that. I did what I did in
-a playful spirit of retaliation for this little gibe about me in
-his book. A man so sensitive as Mr. Whistler now seems to
-be should beware how he goes about joking of others. I
-had no idea of taking any notice of Mr. Whistler’s letter,
-but since you have come and asked me I say that if I had
-known it would have given pain and brought such a torrent
-of abuse upon me, I should have denied myself the little
-luxury of the playful retaliation in which I indulged.”<a class="afnanc" href="#fn30" id="fnanc30">30</a></p></blockquote>
-
-<p>Let me then here put it on record that <i>Trilby</i>
-in book form is not only innocent of “Joe Sibley”
-and the “cut” of the “Two Apprentices” but is in
-other respects far inferior to its serial issue. The
-illus­tra­tions have been greatly reduced, and in the
-process have lost much of their charm. There
-was, however, a large-paper edition of the novel
-published in 1895, containing the
-same number of <span class="xxpn" id="p170">{170}</span>
-illus­tra­tions as the small-paper, together with
-“facsimiles of the pencil studies.” This is the
-most desirable edition outside <i>Harper’s</i>. The
-ideal form is, of course, the serial issue extracted
-from the Magazine and bound up, “Joe Sibley,”
-the suppressed “cut” and all.</p>
-
-<p>This, then, is all that must be said about the
-“suppressed plate,” which is so rigidly put under
-hatches that it must not even be paraded, on this
-occasion only, with its fellows. “When the
-sleeper wakes,” perchance, and copyright is out, a
-cheap edition of this present volume, with the
-suppressed block inserted, will be published, and
-our children’s children will marvel.<a class="afnanc" href="#fn31" id="fnanc31">31</a></p>
-
-<div class="dftnt">
-<p class="pfirst"><a class="afnlabel" href="#fnanc30" id="fn30">30</a>
-After reading Mr. Menpes’s <i>Whistler as I knew
-Him</i>, one discovers that ex­traor­di­nary phenomenon, a man
-who would rather destroy a friendship by what he considered
-a brilliant phrase than sacrifice the brilliant phrase
-and preserve the friendship. It is not wonderful that
-all Whistler’s friends did not prove so complaisant and
-generous as Mr. Menpes.</p>
-
-<p class="pfirst padtopc"><a class="afnlabel" href="#fnanc31" id="fn31">31</a>
-The curious should refer to a delightful open Letter entitled
-<i>Trilby</i> from Mr. Whistler’s pen, which appeared in the initial number
-of Mr. Harry Furniss’s late lamented <i>Lika Joko</i>.</p></div>
-
-<p>The whole episode is a nice commentary upon
-Mr. George Meredith’s distinction between Irony
-and Humour. “If,” says he, “instead of falling
-foul of the ridiculous person with a satiric rod, to
-make him writhe and shriek aloud, you prefer to
-sting him under a semi-caress, by which he shall in
-his anguish be rendered dubious whether indeed
-anything has hurt him, you are
-an engine of <span class="xxpn" id="p171">{171}</span>
-Irony.” But “if you laugh all round him, tumble
-him, roll him about, deal him a smack, and drop a
-tear on him, own his likeness to you and yours to
-your neighbour, spare him as little as you shun
-him, pity him as much as you expose, it is a spirit
-of Humour that is moving you.”</p>
-
-<p>In conclusion, it may be interesting to record
-the fact that no communication passed between
-du Maurier and Whistler upon the subject, other
-than that which appeared in print.</p>
-
-<p>So much for the episode of the suppressed
-<i>Trilby</i> illus­tra­tion, which, as we have seen, was
-complicated by personal con­sid­er­ations.</p>
-
-<p>Let us now turn our attention for a moment
-to a charming little tailpiece which has fallen a
-victim, not to the susceptibilities of an individual,
-but to an undue con­sid­er­ation for the feelings of
-that most living of Tom Morton’s creations, Mrs.
-Grundy. It is to be found in the first edition of
-the immortal <i>Vicar of Wakefield</i> as pictured by
-Mr. Hugh Thomson. And in, entering our
-protest against the deference which has in this
-instance been shown to prudishness, we must at
-the same time admiringly recognise
-the spirit by <span class="xxpn" id="p172">{172}</span>
-which the action has been prompted. The
-“young person” no doubt succeeds on occasion
-in rendering us a little ridiculous. At the same
-time we must not forget that to her we largely
-owe our immunity from what would often shock
-even the moral olfactories of her elders.</p>
-
-<div class="dctr05" id="f2.20">
-<img src="images/i172.png" width="457" height="800" alt="" />
-<div class="dcaption">Suppressed Illustration from <i>The Vicar
-of Wakefield</i></div></div>
-
-<p>Surely, however, the tender morals which could
-bear to read of Thornhill’s attempted seduction of
-Olivia could not logically find
-offence in the <span class="xxpn" id="p173">{173}</span>
-charming little conceit, which by its sup­pres­sion
-has rendered a first edition of the <i>Vicar</i>, as il­lus­trat­ed
-by Mr. Hugh Thomson, an allurement to
-the modern Mæcenas.</p>
-
-<p>Unlike <i>Coaching Days and Coaching Ways</i>,
-il­lus­trat­ed by the same artist, after the first edition
-of which certain drawings also disappeared, but
-without others being substituted in the later
-editions, the first edition of the Thomson <i>Vicar of
-Wakefield</i>, dated 1890, which was published both
-on small and large paper, contains the same
-number of illus­tra­tions as those which succeeded
-it. This, of course, is because in this instance
-the type was not reset, and so it was obligatory
-to substitute an illus­tra­tion for that which was
-suppressed.</p>
-
-<p>The tailpiece, here reproduced by the kind permission
-of Mr. Thomson and Messrs. Macmillan,
-only appears on page 95 of the issues of 1890.</p>
-
-<p>After that date we have a drawing which,
-though a pretty enough little picture of Lady
-Blarney and Miss Carolina Wilhelmina Amelia
-Skeggs (I love, like the Vicar himself, to give the
-whole name), is to my mind far
-inferior to that <span class="xxpn" id="p174">{174}</span>
-which seems to have given offence to some extraordinarily
-constructed purists.</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Austin Dobson, to whom we are indebted
-for the enlightening Prefatory account, in this
-volume, of the more important il­lus­trat­ed editions
-of the <i>Vicar</i>, tells me that he has an impression
-that the immediate cause of the disappearance
-of the peccant tailpiece was a certain objection
-raised by a reviewer in the <i>Spectator</i>. In justice,
-however, to that organ I must at once put it on
-record that I can find no trace of its having so
-demeaned itself.</p>
-
-<p>As a matter of fact I have reason to believe
-that suggestions were made by certain persons who
-arrogate to themselves a sort of private proprietorship
-in the “fine old English novel” and the “fine
-old English caricature” that the little tailpiece was
-in rather bad taste, and that the artist, rather than
-allow the slightest grounds for such an imputation
-to exist, hastened to remove the offender, and substituted
-one that was irreproachable. Personally
-I grieve to think that there should be any one in
-existence with a moral digestion so dyspeptic as
-to discover the least coarseness
-or ill-flavour in <span class="xxpn" id="p175">{175}</span>
-this dainty little fancy, And though the artist,
-we may be sure, has not troubled himself unduly
-about the insinuation, I cannot but feel indignant
-that even a hint of indecorousness should be made
-against one who, above all others, has kept his
-pencil free from any taint of unworthiness. However,
-it is an ill wind that blows nobody any good,
-and we are fain to congratulate ourselves upon
-thus being enabled to enrol Mr. Hugh Thomson
-in a brotherhood which he certainly will not
-repudiate.</p>
-
-<p>Passing allusion has been made above to
-certain illus­tra­tions which also disappeared from
-Mr. Outram Tristram’s very readable book
-<i>Coaching Days and Coaching Ways</i>, il­lus­trat­ed by
-Mr. Hugh Thomson and Mr. Herbert Railton,
-after the first edition of that very charming volume
-was exhausted. It had been my intention to reproduce
-these cancelled drawings here, but I have
-since come to the conclusion that it would be
-little short of an outrage to perpetuate what
-would be cruelly unrep­re­sen­ta­tive of Mr. Hugh
-Thomson’s work. So far as the artist himself
-is concerned no obstacle is raised,
-for he writes <span class="xxpn" id="p176">{176}</span>
-to me in the most generous way, “‘Calling
-for the Squire’s Mailbag’ was withdrawn for the
-same reason as ‘Wild Darrell’ (viz. because it was
-not considered sufficiently good). <i>I should like to
-withdraw scores of other drawings.</i> However, one
-cannot help oneself. It is not very pleasant to
-have these reproduced again, but I quite understand
-the motive of your book, and should be very
-churlish indeed to put any obstacle in your way.”
-This seems to me so nobly altruistic an attitude
-that I feel I should be lacking in mannerliness
-were I to take advantage of it.</p>
-
-<p>It will be enough merely to draw attention
-to facts which will be of interest to those who
-possess one or other of the editions of this book.</p>
-
-<p>First and foremost then, take down your copy
-and note whether the number of the illus­tra­tions is
-216 or 219. Happy as you are if you possess the
-latter, twice happy will you be if the former be
-yours, for in this case you will be the owner,
-not only of a first edition, not only of an edition
-containing the cancelled illus­tra­tions, but also of
-the edition from which the best idea of the beauty
-of the original drawings may be got.
-And for this <span class="xxpn" id="p177">{177}</span>
-reason, that in all but this, the 1888 edition, the
-re­pro­duc­tions have been greatly reduced in size.
-Of course we are here concerned with the cancelled
-pictures, “Wild Darrell” on page 43 and
-“Calling for the Squire’s Mailbag” on page 311,
-but we must remember that their chief value lies
-in their being the guarantees of our having an
-<i>editio princeps</i>. So we have it that in this instance
-as in the case of <i>Trilby</i> the earliest issues have the
-double charm of satisfying at the same time our
-taste for the beautiful and our appetite for the
-curious. Unlike the case of <i>Trilby</i>, however, we
-have here no romantic cir­cum­stances such as
-appeal to the true bibliomaniac. The cancellation
-is merely the result of a laudable determination on
-the part of the artist and his publisher to eliminate
-such illus­tra­tions as they do not consider altogether
-exemplary. Incidentally of course their action
-enhances, in the eyes of the bibliomaniac, the value
-of those copies which they rightly consider marred
-by their inclusion. But this is no business of
-theirs. They are not concerned with diseased
-humanity but with the poor sane public for whom
-they cater. <span class="xxpn" id="p178">{178}</span></p>
-
-<p>The above remarks apply of course to many
-minor sup­pres­sions of the same kind. There is,
-to take one example, the well-known case of
-Curmer’s 1838 edition of <i>Paul et Virginie</i> and
-<i>La Chaumière Indienne</i> superbly il­lus­trat­ed by
-Meissonier, Tony Johannot, Huet, and others.
-This book is a standing compliment to British
-wood-engraving of the day, for, though published
-in Paris by a French publisher, by far the larger
-number of the blocks were entrusted to Samuel
-Williams, Orrin Smith, and other British hands.
-In the earliest issue appears on page 418 the
-wood-engraving of “La Bonne Femme.” Engraved
-by Lavoignat after Meissonier it was
-suppressed in later issues probably because of its
-ugliness, whether the fault of artist or engraver
-I know not. At any rate the engraver was not
-one of the British contingent.</p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="h2herein" id="p179">CHAPTER IX
-
-<span class="h2smallctr">
-THE SUPPRESSED OMAR KHAYYAM ETCHING</span></h2>
-
-<p class="pfirst"><span class="smcap">W<b>HEN</b></span>
-the iconography of Edward FitzGerald’s
-<i>Ruba’iyat of Omar Khayyam</i> comes to be compiled,
-there will be one item which will be found
-to be well-nigh unattainable by the enthusiastic
-collector. That item is not unnaturally dismissed
-in a very few words by Colonel W. F. Prideaux
-in his “Notes for a Bibliography of Edward FitzGerald.”
-He is dealing with the third edition,
-published by Quaritch in the year 1872. “It
-may be added,” he writes, “that a weird frontispiece
-to this edition was designed and etched by
-Mr. Edwin Edwards, the artist friend to whom
-FitzGerald lent his house at the beginning of
-1871, and whose death in 1879 was a source
-of sorrow to him. A few copies of the etching
-were struck off, but it did not
-meet with the <span class="xxpn" id="p180">{180}</span>
-approval of FitzGerald, and was consequently
-never used.”</p></div><!--chapter-->
-
-<p>Now, I am inclined to think that this, as I
-believe, the only published reference to an
-interesting rarity, will hardly satisfy the craving
-of the FitzGerald enthusiast. I shall therefore
-give the fullest information on the subject,
-whereby the modern Mæcenas will be afforded
-full particulars of what only a few of the cult of
-Omar can ever hope to possess.</p>
-
-<p>Those who know their <i>Ruba’iyat</i> as they
-should will remember that there are several
-allusions made by the philosopher to the amusements
-of his countrymen.</p>
-
-<p>Take the FitzGerald
-<span class="nowrap">quatrain:—</span></p>
-
-<div class="dpoemlft"><div class="dstanzalft">
-<span class="spquoteverse"><span class="spquoteblock">“</span>When
- you and I behind the veil are passed,</span>
-<span class="spp00">Oh, but the long, long while the world shall last,</span>
-<span class="spp03">Which of our Coming and Departure heeds</span>
-<span class="spp00">As the Sea’s self should heed a pebble cast.”</span>
-</div></div>
-
-<p>Here, in the last line, we have what is probably
-an allusion to the game of “Ducks and Drakes,”
-“which,” says Mr. Edward Heron-Allen in the
-notes to his admirable translation, “was known to
-the Egyptians and also to the
-Greeks under the <span class="xxpn" id="p181">{181}</span>
-name of ἐποστρακισμος. It was played with oyster-shells.
-The curious are referred to Minutius Felix
-(<span class="smmaj">A.D.</span> 207), who describes the game in his preface.”
-This last is a gentleman with whose name I am
-free to confess I have hitherto been unfamiliar,
-and to whose writings I have no access. I must
-therefore leave the enthusiastic reader to follow
-up the clue for himself. However, with the aid
-of Liddell and Scott, I find myself able to go
-one better than Mr. Heron-Allen, and would refer
-the reader to Archæologus Pollux, the author of
-<i>Onomastikon</i>, whose date is prior to Felix by
-twenty-nine years!</p>
-
-<p>Another game which we find Omar Khayyam
-alluding to is that of chequers, which is familiar
-to us in FitzGerald’s oft-quoted
-<span class="nowrap">quatrain:—</span></p>
-
-<div class="dpoemlft"><div class="dstanzalft">
-<span class="spquoteverse"><span class="spquoteblock">“</span>But
- helpless pieces of the game he plays</span>
-<span class="spp00">Upon this Chequer-board of Nights and Days;</span>
-<span class="spp03">Hither and thither moves, and checks and slays,</span>
-<span class="spp00">And one by one back in the Closet lays”;</span>
-</div></div>
-
-<p class="pcontinue">altered in the later edition
-<span class="nowrap">to:—</span></p>
-
-<div class="dpoemlft"><div class="dstanzalft">
-<span class="spquoteverse"><span class="spquoteblock">“</span>’Tis
- all a Chequer-board of Nights and Days,</span>
-<span class="spp00">Where Destiny with Men for Pieces plays;</span>
-<span class="spp03">Hither and thither moves, and mates, and slays</span>
-<span class="spp00">And one by one back in the Closet lays.”</span>
-</div></div>
-
-<div><span class="xxpn" id="p182">{182}</span></div>
-
-<p>Again we have allusion to what is probably
-some form of the game of tennis in the
-<span class="nowrap">following:—</span></p>
-
-<div class="dpoemlft"><div class="dstanzalft">
-<span class="spquoteverse"><span class="spquoteblock">“</span>The
- Ball no question makes of Ayes and Noes</span>
-<span class="spp00">But Right or Left as strikes the Player goes,</span>
-<span class="spp03">And He that tossed Thee down into the Field</span>
-<span class="spp00">He knows about it all—<span class="smcap">H<b>E</b></span> knows—HE knows.”</span>
-</div></div>
-
-<p>Other passages might be quoted, but these are
-enough for our purpose, for the form of amusement
-with which we have immediately to concern
-ourselves is rather a toy than a game—a toy indeed
-which would seem to have been the forerunner of
-a somewhat elaborate apparatus which, being used
-at first for more frivolous purposes, has now been
-largely adapted to educational ends.</p>
-
-<p>The Magic Lantern of modern times is generally
-referred back to Athanasius Kircher, who died in
-1680, although, according to some, it was known
-four centuries earlier to Roger Bacon. This may
-be true enough so far as the “projecting lantern”
-is concerned, but it can hardly be doubted that it
-had in the line of its earlier ancestors the Persian
-Fanus i Khiyal or Lantern of Fancy, which
-is used with such effect by the Philosopher of
-Naishápur, and which instigated the
-design of the <span class="xxpn" id="p183">{183}</span>
-rare suppressed etching of which I here propose
-to treat with some particularity.</p>
-
-<p>As literally translated by Mr. Heron-Allen, the
-quatrain referring thereto runs as
-<span class="nowrap">follows:—</span></p>
-
-<div class="dpoemfarlft"><div class="dstanzalft">
-<span class="spquoteverse"><span class="spquoteblock">“</span>This
- vault of heaven, beneath which we stand bewildered,</span>
-<span class="spp00">We know to be a sort of magic-lantern;</span>
-<span class="spp00">Know thou that the sun is the lamp flame and the universe is the lamp,</span>
-<span class="spp00">We are like figures that revolve in it.”</span>
-</div></div>
-
-<p>As literally translated by Mr. John Payne it
-run:—“This sphere of the firmament, wherein
-we are amazed, The Chinese lantern I think a
-likeness of it; The sun the lamp-stand and the
-world the lantern; We like the figures are that
-in it revolve.”</p>
-
-<p>As metrically translated by him into a throwback
-quatrain it
-<span class="nowrap">runs:—</span></p>
-
-<div class="dpoemfarlft"><div class="dstanzalft">
-<span class="spquoteverse"><span class="spquoteblock">“</span>The
- Sphere and mankind, who therein in amaze are,</span>
-<span class="spp00">Chinese-lantern like, well it may seem, to our gaze are;</span>
-<span class="spp00">See, the sun is the lamp and the world is the lantern</span>
-<span class="spp00">And the figures ourselves, that revolve round the blaze are.”</span>
-</div></div>
-
-<p>As rendered by FitzGerald more literally than is
-his wont it ran in its first state as
-<span class="nowrap">follows:—</span></p>
-
-<div class="dpoemlft"><div class="dstanzalft">
-<span class="spquoteverse"><span class="spquoteblock">“</span>For,
- in and out, above, below,</span>
-<span class="spp00">’Tis nothing but a Magic Shadow-show,</span>
-<span class="spp03">Play’d in a box whose Candle is the Sun</span>
-<span class="spp00">Round which we Phantom Figures come and go.”</span>
-</div></div>
-
-<div><span class="xxpn" id="p184">{184}</span></div>
-
-<p>As altered later, it assumed the following more
-familiar
-<span class="nowrap">form:—</span></p>
-
-<div class="dpoemlft"><div class="dstanzalft">
-<span class="spquoteverse"><span class="spquoteblock">“</span>We
- are no other than a moving row</span>
-<span class="spp00">Of Magic-Shadow shapes that come and go</span>
-<span class="spp03">Round with the Sun-illumin’d Lantern held</span>
-<span class="spp00">In Midnight by the Master of the Show.”</span>
-</div></div>
-
-<p>All who have read the published letters of
-Edward FitzGerald will have been struck by the
-infinite pains which he took to make this highest
-effort of his genius, the translation of Omar, as
-perfect as possible. His correspondence with his
-friend Professor Cowell teems with allusions to,
-and innumerable discussions on, minute points of
-meaning in the Persian.</p>
-
-<p>Therefore it will not surprise us to find that the
-figure of the Fanus i Khiyal (literally the lanthorn<a class="afnanc" href="#fn32" id="fnanc32">32</a>
-of fancy), here made use of in so masterly a manner,
-had its characteristics and peculiarities carefully
-considered.</p>
-
-<div class="dftnt">
-<p class="pfirst"><a class="afnlabel" href="#fnanc32" id="fn32">32</a>
-It is a not uninteresting fact that the old
-English spelling of the word “lantern” used above is due
-to the mistaken association of the word with the plates of
-transparent horn formerly used in place of glass.</p></div>
-
-<p>By the kindness of Mrs. Edwin Edwards and
-the late Professor Cowell, I am enabled to give
-extracts from an unpublished letter
-written by the <span class="xxpn" id="p185">{185}</span>
-latter to FitzGerald in the year 1868, dealing somewhat
-exhaustively with the matter. This letter
-appears to have been forwarded by FitzGerald to
-Edwin Edwards, the artist, by way of inspiration for
-an etched frontispiece to the edition of <i>The Ruba’iyat</i>
-which was to be published by Quaritch in 1871,
-not, I think, in 1872, as Colonel Prideaux has it.</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-<div class="dkeeptgth">
-<div><i>From Professor Cowell to Edward FitzGerald.</i></div>
-
-<p class="padtopc"><span class="smcap">M<b>Y</b></span>
- <span class="smmaj">DEAR</span>
- E. F. G.—I have sent off one letter to you
-to-day, but I did not answer a question of yours in it, after
-all, which you remind me of in your letter just received by
-this evening’s post.</p></div>
-
-<p>First as to the famous Fanus i Khiyal—you will find it
-explained in a note by the editor at the end of my Calcutta
-Review Paper. I have often seen them in Calcutta. The
-lantern is about a foot and a half high—and nearly a foot
-in diameter, and it moves round with a slow and slightly
-vibratory motion. The candle is placed inside, and the
-draught sends it round. The editor in his note explains
-how the draught is produced:—They are made of a talc<a class="afnanc" href="#fn33" id="fnanc33">33</a>
-cylinder with figures of men and animals cut out of paper
-and pasted on it. The cylinder, which is very light, is
-suspended on an axis, round which it easily
-turns. A hole <span class="xxpn" id="p186">{186}</span>
-is cut near the bottom, and the part cut out is fixed at an
-angle to the cylinder so as to form a vane. When a small
-lamp or candle is placed inside, a current of air is produced
-which keeps the cylinder slowly revolving. (Here is a
-small drawing.)</p>
-
-<p>I cannot recollect how it was suspended, the reviewer
-says, “on an axis.” I think it was hung by a string from
-the top over a candle. I remember seeing it go round one
-evening in our dining-room—the Khánsamah brought one
-to show me.&#xa0;.&#xa0;.&#xa0;.</p>
-
-<div class="dkeeptgth">
-<p>Nicolas’s Fanus<a class="afnanc" href="#fn34" id="fnanc34">34</a>
-is more elaborate than our Calcutta one,
-but on the same principle. He says the figures move round
-from right to left or <i>vice versa</i>—as may be. His <i>fanal</i><a class="afnanc" href="#fn35" id="fnanc35">35</a>
-is
-like mine, only it has a metal top and bottom—the
-cylindrical sides being of waxed cloth and painted; it has a
-handle fixed on the top which the man holds; the candle is
-placed inside on the metal floor.&#xa0;.&#xa0;.&#xa0;.</p>
-
-<p>(Here is another small drawing.)&#xa0;.&#xa0;.&#xa0;.</p>
-
-<div class="padtopc">Yours affectionately,</div>
-
-<p class="padtopc psignature">
- <span class="smcap">E<b>DW.</b></span>
- B. <span class="smcap">C<b>OWELL.</b></span></p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">C<b>AMBRIDGE,</b></span></p>
-
-<p class="pcontinue"><i>January 16, 1868.</i></p>
-</div><!--dkeeptgth--></blockquote>
-
-<div><span class="xxpn" id="p187">{187}</span></div>
-
-<p>The letter was il­lus­trat­ed with two rough
-drawings of the Fanus for FitzGerald’s guidance.
-The last of them represented the toy held out by
-a truncated arm. Edwin Edwards, to whom the
-letter was forwarded, at once with true artistic
-instinct caught at the suggestion unintentionally
-conveyed, and, as will be seen from the etching
-here reproduced, accentuated the hidden presence
-of the “Master of the Show,” by making the
-arm which holds suspended this “Sun-illumined
-Lantern” of a world issue from the impenetrable
-darkness which hides its mysterious lord. Unfortunately,
-the Fanus is not etched with great
-success, although the artist made a special visit
-to the old India Museum, now dispersed, to study
-an example there on exhibition. Had the etching
-equalled the conception, the design could hardly
-have failed to satisfy even FitzGerald’s fastidious
-requirements. As it was, only a limited number<a class="afnanc" href="#fn36" id="fnanc36">36</a>
-of
-proofs (from twenty to twenty-five) were printed
-by that cleverest printer of etchings, Mrs. Edwin
-Edwards, and the plate destroyed. Hence their
-rarity.</p>
-
-<div class="dftnt">
-<p class="pfirst"><a class="afnlabel" href="#fnanc33" id="fn33">33</a>
-This word is curiously enough misprinted
-“tall” in both Nichols’ and Quaritch’s editions of Mr.
-Heron-Allen’s book, whilst in the note to Professor
-Cowell’s article it is printed “tale.” It is something of
-a record, I should think, to find so many compositors and
-readers all at fault.</p>
-
-<p class="pfirst padtopc"><a class="afnlabel" href="#fnanc34" id="fn34">34</a>
-Professor Cowell here refers to J. B. Nicolas, author of a
-French translation of Omar, published at Paris, 1867. In a note
-to <i>Les quatrains de Khéyam traduit du Persan</i>, he says: “In
-Persia the lantern is made of two copper basins, separated by a
-shade of waxed calico about a yard high. The lower one contains
-the candle, and the upper one has a handle for the arm of the ferrásh
-who carries it. The shade is folded like the familiar ‘Chinese lantern.’
-Ornaments are painted on the cloth, and it is to the vacillation of these,
-as the carrier shifts it from one hand to another, that Omar refers.”</p>
-
-<p class="pfirst padtopc"><a class="afnlabel" href="#fnanc35"
-id="fn35">35</a> Qy.: Has this French word for lantern the same root as
-Fanus?</p>
-
-<p class="pfirst padtopc"><a class="afnlabel" href="#fnanc36" id="fn36">36</a>
-At least six of these have lately gone
-to America where they were feverishly bought up by
-enthusiastic Omarians.</p></div><!--dftnt-->
-
-<div><span class="xxpn" id="p188">{188}</span></div>
-
-<p>The conception is a really fine one, and might
-well have proved an illus­tra­tion of the text in the
-best sense of that much-abused term, being, as it
-is, a very different thing from a mere translation
-of the words into pictorial form. It is far more
-than this. It is an illuminator of the meaning,
-and accentuates its spiritual significance. This
-is what illus­tra­tion should do, but rarely does
-do, in these days of rapid and perfunctory
-production.</p>
-
-<p>Of Edwin Edwards the artist I should like to
-take this opportunity of saying a word. His
-name is little known outside artistic circles, and
-it would be somewhat unfair to advertise it in
-connection with an etched plate which failed to
-give satisfaction without at the same time
-making allusion to pictorial work which was
-successful and meritorious. That he did produce
-work of real value is evident from the fact that
-one of his oil pictures of the Thames hangs at
-the Luxembourg in the Salle des Étrangers (for he
-was always more appreciated in France than in
-England), and that two years ago another canvas,
-and that hardly one of the best
-examples of his <span class="xxpn" id="p189">{189}</span>
-work, was chosen by Sir Edward Poynter to be
-well hung in the Tate Gallery.</p>
-
-<div class="dctr01" id="f1.21">
-<img src="images/i188fp.jpg" width="800" height="888" alt="" />
-<div class="dcaption">The suppressed frontispiece For “Omar Khayyam.”
-(<i>By Edwin Edwards</i>)</div></div>
-
-<p>It may also be mentioned that high appreciation
-of his talents has been shown across the
-Channel by eulogistic articles in the <i>Gazette des
-Beaux Arts</i>, <i>Les Beaux Arts Illustrés</i>, <i>La Vie
-Moderne</i>, <i>L’Art</i>, etc., etc.</p>
-
-<p>It is, however, on his work as an etcher that his
-reputation must chiefly rest, and it would be more
-than unjust to allow the artist who produced such
-a <i>tour de force</i> as the great etching of “London
-from the Greenwich Observatory,” to mention
-only one of his three hundred and seventy-one
-works in this medium, to be advertised by an
-etching, finely conceived it is true, but unsatisfactorily
-carried to an issue.</p>
-
-<p>Not that these facts will in any way affect the
-thoroughgoing rarity-hunter in his estimate of
-the suppressed plate here described. It will be
-enough for him to know that not more than a
-quarter of a hundred of his rivals can own a proof
-of the etching to make him ready to sell his last
-shirt for its acquisition. He will continue to value
-a print for its rarity rather than
-for its beauty, <span class="xxpn" id="p190">{190}</span>
-a book for its height in millimetres rather than
-for its depth in thought.</p>
-
-<p>No doubt these be hard words. Then why, it
-will be asked, pander to so foolish a passion?
-Shall I confess? Yes, indeed, and glory in the
-confession that I, too, am of the gentle brotherhood,
-that I, too, am a subscriber to <i>The
-Connoisseur</i> (or “The Connoyzer,” as one of my
-friends at Mr. W. H. Smith’s bookstall used to
-call that delightful pub­li­ca­tion), that I, too,—in
-fine, that I am, by the favour of Fortune, the
-happy possessor of two proofs of the suppressed
-etching to the Omar of 1872!</p>
-
-<p>And now just one word with that gentle hunter,
-Mr. Thomas B. Mosher of Portland, Maine, U.S.A.,
-who did me the honour of transferring a large
-portion of the above, originally written for <i>The
-Bookman</i>, to the pages of his beautiful 1902 edition
-of <i>The Ruba’iyat</i>. Of that I make no complaint,
-for I think it very probable that he asked and
-obtained my permission. What I do complain of
-is that, in a footnote, he falls foul of me for being
-“ungracious” to Colonel Prideaux in suggesting
-the date 1871 as the year of
-pub­li­ca­tion of the <span class="xxpn" id="p191">{191}</span>
-third edition, instead of the year 1872, as Colonel
-Prideaux has it in his most valuable little
-“Notes for a Bibliography of Edward FitzGerald”
-1901. Mr. Mosher says “no manner of doubt
-exists as to the date.” Let me tell him that I
-have it on the authority of one who was on
-intimate terms both with FitzGerald and Edwin
-Edwards at the time when this third edition was
-published that, though the book bore the date
-1872 on the title, as a matter of fact it was
-<i>published</i> in the autumn of 1871 and <i>post-dated</i>. If
-it be “ungracious” to give Colonel Prideaux a piece
-of information which he had not the opportunity
-of obtaining for himself, then I sincerely hope that
-all who read this volume, and find themselves
-better informed, as well they may, than I am, will
-be equally “ungracious” to me. <i>La plupart des
-hommes n’ont pas le courage de corriger les autres,
-parcequ’ils n’ont pas le courage de souffrir qu’on
-les corrige.</i></p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="h2herein" id="p192">CHAPTER X
-<span class="h2smallctr">
-ADAPTED OR PALIMPSEST PLATES</span></h2>
-
-<div class="dpoemctr fsz7"><div class="dstanzactr">
-<span class="spquoteverse"><span class="spquoteblock">“</span>God
- bless the King, I mean the faith’s defender,</span>
-<span class="spp00">God bless—no harm in blessing—the Pretender.</span>
-<span class="spp00">Who that Pretender is, and who is King—</span>
-<span class="spp00">God bless us all!—that’s quite another thing.”</span>
-</div></div>
-
-<p class="pfirst"><span class="smcap">S<b>O</b></span> sang the old
-Jacobite John Byrom, and, taking my cue from him, I do not propose
-to enter here into the vexed question of James Francis Edward
-Stuart’s claim to this or that title.<a class="afnanc" href="#fn37"
-id="fnanc37">37</a> It is merely a happy accident that lends me
-so picturesque a figure round which to group certain pictorial
-rarities, germane to our subject, of which little is known, and
-of which the <i>petit-maître</i> will be therefore grateful for some
-particulars.</p></div>
-
-<div class="dftnt">
-<p class="pfirst"><a class="afnlabel" href="#fnanc37" id="fn37">37</a>
-It may be mentioned that Jesse, in his
-<i>Memoirs of the Pretenders</i>, always calls him James
-<i>Frederick</i>.</p></div>
-
-<p>The history of the engraved copperplate is full
-of that kind of romance which
-peculiarly <span class="xxpn" id="p193">{193}</span>
-commends itself to the lover of what is quaint and
-curious in the byways of art, and perhaps the most
-romantic phase of its history is that with which
-I am about to deal. It is the sort of romance
-which was inseparable from what may be called
-the pre-machinery days, and is as foreign to the
-spirit of this age as are the slashed doublets of
-our forefathers or the starched irrelevances of
-their wives.</p>
-
-<p>It may be, of course, that the Process block of
-to-day will be found to be as full of romance
-to-morrow. Indeed we have already found some
-indications of this in a former chapter, and it
-is probably true that romance is as all-pervading
-in the mental as ether is in the physical world,
-and that it is only lack of the proper intellectual
-reagent that makes the discovery of it difficult.</p>
-
-<p>However that may be, one thing is certain, that
-most of us find it easier to come at the “poetry
-of cir­cum­stance” when centuries or decades have
-left it behind than when it is at our immediate
-threshold.</p>
-
-<p>In these days of lightning pictorial satire, when
-Monday’s political move is on
-Tuesday served up <span class="xxpn" id="p194">{194}</span>
-in genial topsy-turvy by “F. C. G.” in the <i>Westminster</i>
-or “G. R. H.” in the <i>Pall Mall</i>, and when
-<i>Punch’s</i> weekly cartoon is voted seven days late
-by the Man in the Street, it is difficult for us
-to realise the shifts to which political satire was
-put when the laborious engraved or etched broadside
-was the quickest method of getting at the
-picture-loving masses. Just imagine the agony
-of impatience of the political satirist who had
-designed his broadside and had to await the tardy
-engraving of the copperplate, to be followed by
-the deliberate hand-printing and hand-painting of
-the impressions before they could be published,
-perhaps only to find in the end that the nine-days’
-wonder was past, or that events had blunted his
-most telling points.</p>
-
-<p>So, too, when satirist was employed against
-satirist, how hopeless it seemed for retaliation to
-follow swiftly enough upon the occasion to make
-any retort in kind worth while at all.</p>
-
-<p>Then it was that the wit of man, quickened
-by necessity, conceived the clever stratagem of
-the <i>adapted</i> copperplate, of which it is here my
-purpose to give
-some remarkable examples. <span class="xxpn" id="p195">{195}</span></p>
-
-<p>I fancy I see the victim of some shrewder libel
-than usual, with which the town has been flooded,
-pricking off in hot haste to the pictorial satirist
-in his pay, and demanding the production of a
-trenchant and immediate reply, so that the retort
-may be in the printsellers’ windows before the
-attack has had time to do its deadly work.</p>
-
-<p>The satirist names a month as the earliest
-possible date. His employer curses him for a
-blundering slowcoach. Before a month is out the
-mischief will be done beyond repairing. And he
-is flinging himself out of the workshop when a
-happy thought comes with a flash into his head.</p>
-
-<p>How about the copperplate of that broadside
-which fell so flat a year ago because of its tardiness?
-It was meant to be a counter-thrust to
-just such another attack as this, but it was a
-month too late. Is there no way of fitting a new
-barb on to the old arrow? Is there no way of
-adapting the year-old weapon to the present
-necessity?</p>
-
-<p>And then there follows anxious discussion and
-careful examination. The head of A. burnished
-out here can be re-engraved in the
-similitude of B. <span class="xxpn" id="p196">{196}</span>
-C. will stand as he is and do duty, with a new
-index number and altered footnote, for D. Here
-an inappropriate object can be replaced by a panel
-of appropriate verse. The inscriptions on the
-banderoles issuing from the characters’ mouths
-must be altered. And, hey presto! in the
-twinkling of a bedpost we have our answer ready
-for a not too critical public.</p>
-
-<p>The original lampooner, who counted on a good
-month’s start, will be confronted with a retort
-before he has time to turn round. The whole
-town will be set buzzing about the successful ruse,
-and the laugh will be turned upon the aggressor.</p>
-
-<p>Of course it would be comparatively rarely that
-the adapted plate could be wholly <i>apropos</i>, but
-such capital ingenuity was exercised, once the
-stratagem had been imagined, that the practice
-was not so uncommon nor so unsuccessful as
-might be naturally expected. In this chapter I
-am only treating of those dealing with one
-particular episode, but I have in my possession
-at least thirty of these remarkable productions.</p>
-
-<p>From them we find that it was not always the
-engraver of a plate who
-re-adjusted his own <span class="xxpn" id="p197">{197}</span>
-handiwork, but piratical hands were sometimes laid
-upon the work of a master by mere journeymen
-engravers who did not scruple to leave the original
-artist’s name for the better selling of the plate,
-although it had ceased to represent even in the
-remotest degree his sentiments or intentions.</p>
-
-<p>Indeed, I could tell of at least one remarkable
-plate originally prepared in honour of a certain
-great personage, which, being thievishly appropriated
-by his opponents, was by them so
-judiciously metamorphosed as to cover him with
-as much confusion as it had originally panoplied
-him with honour.<a class="afnanc" href="#fn38" id="fnanc38">38</a></p>
-
-<div class="dftnt">
-<p class="pfirst"><a class="afnlabel" href="#fnanc38" id="fn38">38</a>
-Mozley, in his entertaining <i>Reminiscences</i>, tells the following
-story of the latter days of the Oxford Movement, which is somewhat
-parallel: “Isaac Williams published a volume of poetry called <i>The
-Baptistry</i>, upon a series of curious and very beautiful engravings,
-by Boetius a Bolswert, in an old Latin work, entitled <i>Via Vitæ
-Æternæ</i>. In these pictures, besides other things peculiar to the
-Roman Church, there frequently occurs the figure of the Virgin
-Mother, crowned and in glory, the object of worship, and distributing
-the gifts of Heaven. For this figure Williams substituted the Church,
-and thereby incurred a protest from Newman for adopting a Roman
-Catholic work just so far as suited his own purpose, without caring for
-the further responsibilities.”</p></div>
-
-<p>This is, I believe, the first time that any
-attempt has been made to bring this fascinating
-subject before the public.
-Incidentally it has <span class="xxpn" id="p198">{198}</span>
-been touched upon once or twice in pub­li­ca­tions
-of my own as it affected other byways in art, and
-has been alluded to in the Introductions to the
-<i>Catalogue of Prints and Drawings in the British
-Museum</i> (<i>Satires</i>), prepared under the direction
-of the late Keeper of the Prints and Drawings,
-George William Reid, by F. G. Stephens, to
-which monumental work all students of such
-subjects are profoundly indebted. But it has
-never been treated with anything approaching the
-completeness that it deserves. It is practically an
-unworked phase of print-collecting—a new craze
-in which the dilettante may specialise.</p>
-
-<p>As I have said, we are fortunate in having in
-this place so picturesque a figure as that of the
-Old Pretender, or the Chevalier de St. George, as
-some like to call him, round whom to group our
-first batch of these pictorial palimpsests.</p>
-
-<p>James Francis Edward Stuart was, as all who
-know their history will remember, the son of
-James II. by his second wife, Mary of Modena.
-He was born on June 10, 1688, at St James’s
-Palace.</p>
-
-<p>James II. was then in his
-fifty-fifth year. By <span class="xxpn" id="p199">{199}</span>
-his cruelties after Monmouth’s rebellion, by his
-attack on the Universities, by the Trial of the
-Seven Bishops, by his Court of Commissioners of
-Ecclesiastical Causes, and by his misuse of the
-Dispensing Power he had alienated the whole
-nation, with the exception of a few Roman
-Catholics and hangers-on of the Court, and his
-throne was tottering.</p>
-
-<p>The only element of strength in his position
-was the certainty that sooner or later the crown
-was bound to pass to one of the Protestant
-daughters of his first marriage; for though the
-present Queen had borne him four or five children
-they had all died young. It was now six years
-since there had been any hint of a royal birth.
-What were probably grossly exaggerated accounts
-of the King’s early irregularities were matter of
-common gossip, and the Queen’s health was far
-from robust. Suddenly, at a most opportune
-moment for the Roman Catholics—so opportune
-a moment indeed that intrigue at once suggested
-itself—it was announced to the world that Mary
-was with child, and a day of thanksgiving was
-appointed five months before
-the Queen’s delivery. <span class="xxpn" id="p200">{200}</span></p>
-
-<p>Now was the occasion for reviving a report
-which had been sedulously spread by the enemies
-of the Court from the very earliest days of the
-Queen’s marriage—<i>that the King, in order to
-transmit his dominions and his bigotry to a Roman
-Catholic heir, had determined to impose a surreptitious
-offspring on his Protestant subjects</i>.</p>
-
-<p>In due course came her Majesty’s lying-in at St.
-James’s, and although the King took every precaution,
-by the solemn depositions of forty-two
-persons of rank who were present, against questions
-arising as to the child’s identity, the celebrated
-“warming-pan” story was hatched, which continued
-to gain credence for more than half a
-century. Nor were circumstantial details of the
-most intimate nature in support of the lie wanting.
-During the labour, it was maintained, the curtains
-of the bed were drawn more closely than usual on
-such occasions; neither the Princess of Orange,
-the nearest Protestant heir to the throne, nor her
-immediate adherents were asked to be in attendance;
-an apartment had been selected for the
-Queen’s accommodation in which there was a door
-near the head of the bed which opened
-on a back <span class="xxpn" id="p201">{201}</span>
-staircase. Though the weather was hot, and the
-room heated by the great crowd of persons
-present, a warming-pan was introduced into the
-bed; and finally the pan contained a new-born
-child, which was immediately afterwards presented
-to the bystanders as the offspring of the Queen!</p>
-
-<p>The following song, sung by two gentlemen
-at the Maypole in the Strand, is sufficiently
-explanatory:</p>
-
-<div class="dpoemfarlft"><div class="dstanzalft">
-<span class="spquoteverse"><span class="spquoteblock">“</span>As
- I went by St. James’s I heard a bird sing,</span>
-<span class="spp00">That the Queen had for certain a boy for a King;</span>
-<span class="spp00">But one of the soldiers did laugh and did say,</span>
-<span class="spp00"><i>It was born overnight and brought forth the next day.</i></span>
-<span class="spp00">This bantling was heard at St. James’s to squall,</span>
-<span class="spp00">Which made the Queen make so much haste from Whitehall.”</span>
-</div></div>
-
-<p>The last line referred to the fact that the Queen
-had played at cards at Whitehall Palace till
-eleven o’clock on Saturday, June 9, whence she
-was carried in a chair to St. James’s Palace, and
-on the Sunday, June 10, between the hours of
-nine and ten in the morning, “was brought to
-bed of a prince.”</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>It is a remarkable fact [says Jesse] that as early as 1682
-(six years before this), when the Queen, then Duchess of
-York, was declared to be pregnant, the same rumours were
-<span class="xxpn" id="p202">{202}</span>
-propagated as on the present occasion—that an imposture
-was intended to be obtruded upon the nation. Fortunately
-on that occasion the infant proved to be a female, or doubtless
-some improbable fiction would have been invented
-similar to that which obtained credit in 1688.</p></blockquote>
-
-<p>Undoubtedly the whole thing was a lie, but it
-did its deadly work.<a class="afnanc" href="#fn39" id="fnanc39">39</a>
-The whole nation was
-prepared to accept the flimsiest evidence, and
-within six months father, mother, and child had
-fled to France.</p>
-
-<div class="dftnt">
-<p class="pfirst"><a class="afnlabel" href="#fnanc39" id="fn39">39</a>
-Certain imprudent Roman Catholics gave colour to the popular
-belief by loudly expressing their opinion that a miracle had been
-wrought. One fanatic had even gone so far as to prophesy that the
-Queen would give birth to twins, of whom the elder would be King of
-England and the younger Pope of Rome!</p></div>
-
-<p>So much for the story that inspired the remarkable
-broadsides with which it is here our
-purpose to deal. It will be noticed that these
-broadsides are all Dutch in their origin, a fact
-that is not surprising when we remember that they
-formed part of the propagandum which was soon
-to land William of Orange, the husband of James’s
-eldest daughter, on the throne of England.</p>
-
-<p>The first that we reproduce is entitled
-“L’Europe Alarmée pour le Fils d’un Meunier.”</p>
-
-<p>The artist is that
-remarkably clever Dutchman, <span class="xxpn" id="p203">{203}</span>
-Romeyn de Hooghe, whose delicate and facile
-handling of the point is well exemplified in the
-seascape at the back of the picture.</p>
-
-<p>Let us examine in detail the most important
-features of this elaborate broadside.</p>
-
-<p>The centre of attraction is, of course, the surreptitious
-infant Prince of Wales, who lies in his
-cradle to the left of the picture. Those assembled
-about him are discussing the possibility of the plot
-having been discovered. On his coverlet are
-various playthings, amongst which is conspicuous
-a toy mill, emphasising, of course, the generally
-accepted belief that he was the son of a miller,
-for, in their lying, James’s enemies were nothing
-if not circumstantial. This allusive toy figures
-in almost all the satiric prints dealing with the
-Old Pretender.</p>
-
-<p>At the foot of the cradle, which is decorated
-with an owl, an owlet, and a snake (emblems of
-evil), is a pap-bowl and spoon, half concealed by
-the arm of “the first mother”<a class="afnanc" href="#fn40" id="fnanc40">40</a>
-(1) <span class="xxpn" id="p204">{204}</span>
-who seems to
-be pointing out to Father Petre (2), the instigator
-of the plot, that the child has been <i>born too old</i>.
-The Father, whose intimacy with the lady is
-suggested by a tender fondling of her right hand
-with his left, fingers his rosary with the other, and
-gazes fixedly into her eyes.</p>
-
-<div class="dftnt">
-<p class="pfirst"><a class="afnlabel" href="#fnanc40" id="fn40">40</a>
-It is not easy to decide which of the female
-figures is intended to represent Mary of Modena and which
-the miller’s wife. At first sight one would expect the
-Queen to be represented by the central figure 3, but,
-on the other hand, I have in my possession a very rare
-mezzotint
-of the period which represents Father Petre and the Queen
-in almost identical attitudes as figures 1 and 2 in the
-present plate. This view of the matter is supported by the
-following scandalous verse of the day:
-</p>
-<div class="dpoemlft"><div class="dstanzalft">
-<span class="spp00">Some priests, they say, crept nigh her honour,</span>
-<span class="spp00">And sprinkled some good holy water upon her,</span>
-<span class="spp00">Which made her conceive of what has undone her.</span>
-</div></div>
-</div>
-
-<p>Edward Petre was one of the best-hated men
-in the country, and was popularly looked upon as
-James’s evil genius. The King would have made
-him Archbishop of York, but the Pope refused his
-dispensation. In the year preceding the production
-of this satire he had been made a Privy
-Councillor.</p>
-
-<div class="dbigpicture" id="f1.22">
-<div class="dctr01 dhtml">
-<img src="images/i204fp.jpg" width="1200" height="1073" alt="" />
-<div class="dcaption">“L’Europe alarmée pour le Fils d’un
-Meunier.” (<i>The plate in its first state</i>)</div></div>
-
-<div class="dctr01 dhandheld">
-<img src="images/i204fp-epubmobi.jpg" width="800" height="716" alt="" />
-<div class="dcaption">“L’Europe alarmée pour le Fils d’un
-Meunier.” (<i>The plate in its first state</i>)</div></div></div><!--dbigpicture-->
-
-<div class="dbigpicture" id="f1.23">
-<div class="dctr01 dhtml">
-<img src="images/i205fp.jpg" width="1200" height="959" alt="" />
-<div class="dcaption"><i>The plate in its second state, now entitled</i>
-“La Cour De Paix solitaire, entre les Roses piquantes et
-les Lis”</div></div>
-
-<div class="dctr01 dhandheld">
-<img src="images/i205fp-epubmobi.jpg" width="800" height="639" alt="" />
-<div class="dcaption"><i>The plate in its second state, now entitled</i>
-“La Cour De Paix solitaire, entre les Roses piquantes et
-les Lis”</div></div></div><!--dbigpicture-->
-
-<p>In the middle of the picture sits the “second
-mother” (3) in a highly-wrought chair, round the
-legs of which twine carved serpents. Tears
-course down her cheeks. With her right hand
-she points to the cradle as she listens to the
-counsels of the papal nuncio Count Ferdinand
-d’Adda (4), who, with armour peeping
-from under <span class="xxpn" id="p205">{205}</span>
-his robes and with his armoured foot treading on
-his naked weapon, recommends submission of the
-whole matter to the arbitrament of the sword.</p>
-
-<p>Immediately beyond the Cardinal stands Louis
-XIV. (5), James’s faithful ally. In one hand he
-carries a bag of money, referring, doubtless, to his
-offer of five hundred thousand livres for the equipment
-of an English fleet to oppose the Prince of
-Orange’s threatened invasion; with the other he
-exposes to view a list of his army.</p>
-
-<p>Behind, and to the right of Cardinal d’Adda,
-Louis’ son, the Dauphin of France, makes as
-though he would draw his sword, whilst the Pope
-(Innocent XI.), in shadow at the extreme right
-of the picture (7, the number is very indistinctly
-seen on the dark clothing) grasps the keys of
-St. Peter, and would seem to be sarcastically
-doubtful of the whole affair. “The Pope,”
-says Voltaire, “founded very little hopes on the
-proceedings of James, and constantly refused
-Petre a cardinal’s hat.”</p>
-
-<p>Beyond the Pope is seen the armoured figure
-of Leopold I. (8), with the German eagle on his
-helmet. With his right hand
-he grasps his <span class="xxpn" id="p206">{206}</span>
-sword-hilt; with his left he gesticulates as though reminding
-the war party that he also has to be
-reckoned with. No. 9 I cannot identify.</p>
-
-<p>Behind Mary of Modena’s chair stands (13, the
-figure is on her breast) Catherine of Braganza, the
-childless wife of Charles II. She is doubtless
-lamenting that, when residing at Whitehall, she
-had not herself manufactured a prince on the
-Modena plan. Next to her (11, the figure is on
-the pillar) a doctor of the Sorbonne promises them
-all dispensations—a hit at James’s well-known
-misuse of the dispensing powers. Next to him,
-with his right hand convulsively grasping a roll of
-charters, stands James himself (10). In his left
-he carries parliamentary and corporation papers.
-With despairing eyes he gazes at the baby who,
-so far from giving, as he had fondly hoped, the
-finishing touch to the Roman Catholic triumph
-in England, is likely to prove the most damning
-count in the country’s indictment of his iniquities
-and treasons. To the left the midwife (12) encourages
-him to proceed with the imposture.
-Below her two monks (14 and 15), greatly
-alarmed, pray aloud at the head
-of the cradle. <span class="xxpn" id="p207">{207}</span></p>
-
-<p>Immediately behind them two heralds, one
-mounted on an ass, blow on trumpets to call
-attention to the Dutch fleet, which is seen
-approaching through the right-hand arch, whilst
-through the left a fort is seen belching forth
-smoke and resisting the landing of the longboats.</p>
-
-<p>In the left corner of the picture certain
-Quakers (17, 18, 19), whose curious friendship with
-James must not be forgotten, deprecate the priests’
-blasphemies, whilst beyond them a crowd of Irish
-papists is suggested by their waving symbols and a
-torn flag embroidered with the sacred monogram.
-Behind the Quakers an oriental-looking person
-scans the heavens through a telescope.</p>
-
-<p>The colonnade beneath which all this takes
-place has its pillars surmounted by owls and a
-demoniacal bat. The arches are inscribed with the
-words “Het word hier nacht,” and other inscriptions
-are seen on the walls. On the extreme
-right of the picture is reared a banner bearing
-what appear to be the words “In utrumque
-Turgam,” of which it is difficult to imagine the
-meaning. “In utramque Furcam,” which would
-be intelligible, has been suggested to
-me as an <span class="xxpn" id="p208">{208}</span>
-alternative reading, but cannot, I think, be
-accepted. Another friend hazards “In utrumque
-(modum) resurgam,” which may be freely translated,
-“I shall be ‘dormy’ either way,” and would
-certainly make sense. Farther than that I cannot
-go with him.</p>
-
-<p>So much for the first state of this elaborate
-copperplate which did its part in propagating the
-lie which went far to lose for James II. the crown
-of England.</p>
-
-<p>After having served this purpose the plate
-was laid aside for nearly a quarter of a century.
-During this period the throne of England had
-been occupied by James II.’s two daughters, Mary
-and Anne, to the exclusion of their father, who
-died in exile in 1701, and of the Chevalier de St.
-George, whose proclamation by Louis of France
-as James III. of England<a class="afnanc" href="#fn41" id="fnanc41">41</a>
-had been followed by
-the war of the Spanish Succession.</p>
-
-<div class="dftnt">
-<p class="pfirst"><a class="afnlabel" href="#fnanc41" id="fn41">41</a>
-In the Stuart Room at Madresfield Court Lord
-Beauchamp lately showed me a portrait of the Chevalier,
-labelled “James III.”!</p></div>
-
-<p>In 1713, just twenty-four years after the plate
-had been engraved, the Peace of Utrecht, so
-vitally important as marking
-the beginning of <span class="xxpn" id="p209">{209}</span>
-England’s commercial prosperity, was signed
-between England and France. Amongst other
-things it secured the Protestant Succession to
-the throne of England through the House of
-Hanover, and the dismissal of the Chevalier from
-France. The suspension of arms between the
-English and the French which preceded the
-signing of the treaty was seized upon as the
-opportunity for resuscitating the plate and adapting:
-it to the altered cir­cum­stances. Now did some
-pictorial vandal wrench and twist the figures to
-new and undreamt-of uses and turn the Council
-of War of 1688 into the Court of Peace between
-the Roses and Lilies of 1712! The plate now
-professes to be published in London, though,
-from the fact that the pub­li­ca­tion line runs. “A
-Londres chez Turner,” and from sundry misspellings,
-it would appear certain that the alterations
-on the plate were effected abroad.</p>
-
-<p>In this second state the plate has been reduced
-at the top as far as the capitals of the pillars, and
-at the bottom as far as the left foot of the figure
-which represented Father Petre in the original.
-The index figures have
-also been changed. <span class="xxpn" id="p210">{210}</span></p>
-
-<p>The explanation of the design as it now stands is
-contained in eighty-three lines of doggerel French
-verse. Taking the alterations one by one we find
-in the first place that the infant and cradle have
-been bodily removed, and (1) the “Plan de Paix”
-substituted. It bears the legend “Vrede tussen
-het Lelien en Roosen hof. Paix entre les Lis et
-les Roses picantes.”</p>
-
-<p>The central figure (2) of the picture is now
-changed into an allegorical personage labelled
-“Pax,” who holds in her left hand a paper
-inscribed “Juste Protestation des Alliés,” whilst
-with her right she indicates the “Plan de Paix.”
-In this way the new artist, with some ingenuity,
-suggests that the spirit of peace is in sympathy with
-the dissatisfaction of the Allies at the negotiations
-which are proceeding between England and France.
-Her remonstrances are addressed to the figure on
-her left (3), which formerly represented Cardinal
-d’Adda, but is now labelled “Pole.” (the Abbé
-Melchior de Polignac), who tries to allay her
-forebodings. The difficulty of the Cardinal’s hat,
-which is of course out of place on an Abbé, is
-ingeniously got over by the writer
-of the French <span class="xxpn" id="p211">{211}</span>
-libretto, who refers to him as a Cardinal <i>in petto</i>.
-As a matter of fact the writer proved a good
-prophet, for, on the conclusion of the peace, for
-which Polignac was largely responsible, he was,
-on the nomination of the Chevalier de St.
-George, created and appointed Cardinal Maître
-de la Chapelle du Roi. He was at the time of
-the pub­li­ca­tion of the altered plate plenipotentiary
-in Holland for the French. It will be noticed
-that the <i>pince-nez</i> and moustache have now been
-dispensed with.</p>
-
-<p>The figure behind Polignac (4), which originally
-stood for the Dauphin, who, by the way, was but
-lately dead, is now labelled at the foot “Mont-or”
-(the Duke of Ormond’s name reversed), and at the
-head “Tori.” By an ingenious turn of thought,
-the Dauphin’s warlike action of <i>drawing</i> his sword
-is now metamorphosed into the Duke’s conciliatory
-action of <i>sheathing</i> his. This refers, of course, to
-the instructions which he had received from the
-English Government, on taking over the command
-of the troops in the Low Countries from the Duke
-of Marlborough, to do all in his power to bring
-about a peaceful issue. <span class="xxpn" id="p212">{212}</span></p>
-
-<p>Beyond Polignac the figure (5) which formerly
-represented Louis XIV. is now put to humbler
-uses, and merely represents a French herald. The
-paper in his left hand, which originally enumerated
-Louis’ forces, now bears the gratifying legend:</p>
-
-<div class="dpoemctr"><div class="dstanzactr">
-<span class="spp00">Bonne Paix</span>
-<span class="spp00">De l’Anglois</span>
-<span class="spp00">Me rend guai.</span>
-</div></div>
-
-<p>The lady in front of him (6), who formerly stood
-for Catherine of Braganza, now represents Maria
-Louisa of Savoy, the first wife of Philip V. of
-Spain (fortunately for him not such a firebrand
-as his second wife proved to be). She turns to
-her handsome young husband (7) (here somewhat
-libellously represented by the whilom “Old
-Hatchet Face”) who has just renounced for
-himself and descendants all claims of succession
-to the crown of France. His right hand rests
-on the scroll of “charters” as before, but the
-document in his left now bears the legend: “Leli
-afstand onder Conditie” (The lily to surrender
-under conditions).</p>
-
-<p>Passing almost to the extreme right of the
-picture, the eagle-helmeted
-figure (8) which <span class="xxpn" id="p213">{213}</span>
-before represented the Emperor Leopold I. now
-represents his son Charles VI., “Le Seigneur
-juste de la Cour d’Orient et Occident.” Clutching
-his huge sword, he expresses the anger of the
-Imperialists at the project for peace between
-England and France. In the end he refused to
-concur in the peace of Utrecht, and continued at
-war with France until 1714.</p>
-
-<p>On either side of him are two figures numbered
-alike (9, 9). That on his right, which bears the
-word “Wigh” engraved on his hat, represents the
-Duke of Marlborough, the deposed military leader
-of the Whigs. That on his left is one of the
-Duke’s followers, who, by his drawn sword, points
-the allusion of the librettist to the “Pacificateur
-par le fer.”</p>
-
-<p>To the extreme right of the picture (10) the
-Pope, now Clement XI. in place of Innocent XI.,
-encourages Polignac in his efforts for peace, and
-promises him “La Pourpre” as his reward.</p>
-
-<p>Returning to the middle background of the
-crowd we find (11, 11) two Jesuits. The one
-who looks over the left shoulder of No. 7 was
-in the first state of the plate a
-doctor of the <span class="xxpn" id="p214">{214}</span>
-Sorbonne. The index number of this figure is
-now on his hat. Originally it was on the pillar
-above him. This the adapter has apparently
-attempted to turn into a rough ornamentation
-by the addition of parallel strokes. Becoming
-dissatisfied, he has crossed out the whole by
-irregular horizontal lines. To the left of figure
-7 is seen (12) the Pretender, the surreptitious
-infant of the original, now grown to manhood,
-whispering in Philip of Spain’s ear that though
-he claims as a Protestant the throne of his father,
-he is in his heart of the Romish faith. This figure
-originally represented the midwife, but has been
-metamorphosed by the addition of a man’s hat,
-wig, and ruffles.</p>
-
-<p>To the extreme left of the foreground of the
-picture the erstwhile Father Petre is now transformed
-(13) into a Jesuit confessor, who amorously
-converses with (14) “La Courtisane de Bourbon,”
-Madame de Maintenon. This cruel aspersion on
-the character of one who was really, though
-secretly, Louis XIV.’s wife, and whose nobleness
-of character is now fully established, was
-characteristic of the times. The
-Plan de Paix, <span class="xxpn" id="p215">{215}</span>
-which was so obnoxious to the author of the
-satire, would seem to have just fallen from her
-fingers, and doubtless he is right in recognising
-that she had a hand in its consummation.
-Beyond the table sit a monk and friar (15, 15),
-as formerly, except that the removal of the cradle
-has necessitated an extension of their figures. In
-the background, against the left-hand pillar, is (16)
-the “Harlequin de France.” In front of him the
-three figures (17, 18, 19), originally Quakers, are
-now referred to as “Esprits Libres.” The man
-with the telescope (20) is “The Observer of Foreign
-Countries.” The other subordinate figures are the
-same as before, save for the addition, in some cases,
-of index numbers.</p>
-
-<p>It is interesting to notice that this plate was
-so successful in its adapted state that it was made
-the basis of a design engraved for a German broadside
-of the following year entitled “Der Fridens-Hoffzwischen
-der Rose und der versöhnten Lilie,”
-with which it has many points in common.</p>
-
-<p>I have treated of this plate at considerable
-length because it is the most important of the
-palimpsest plates of this period.
-I shall close <span class="xxpn" id="p216">{216}</span>
-this chapter by reproducing one other remarkable
-example designed in its first state to expose the
-same supposed wicked plot. In the next chapter
-I shall give another dealing with the birth of the
-Old Pretender, from which we shall gain some idea
-of the extent to which this clever stratagem of the
-adapted copperplate was made use of in the deliberate
-days of the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries.</p>
-
-<p>For the present I must pass over two elaborate
-broadsides engraved by Jean Bollard, and entitled
-respectively “Aan den Experten Hollandschen
-Hoofd-Smith” (To the Expert Dutch Head-Smith),
-and “Aan der Meester Tonge-Slyper”
-(To the Master Tongue-Grinder). These, as we
-shall see later, after doing their work against
-James II. and the Old Pretender, were seized upon
-many years afterwards by the piratical publisher
-of a remarkable Jansenist tract, called “Roma
-Perturbata, Ofte’t Beroerde Romen, etc.,” and
-adapted to the uses of the anti-Jesuit propagandum,
-in the same way as “L’Europe
-Alarmée pour le Fils d’un Meunier,” described
-above, was adapted after twenty-five years of
-idleness as a satire upon the
-Peace of Utrecht. <span class="xxpn" id="p217">{217}</span></p>
-
-<p>It was this same piratical tractarian who seized
-upon the elaborate plate which I am here reproducing,
-divorced it from its letterpress, cut the plate
-down to the size of his tract, and appropriated it
-in its second state to the purposes of “Roma
-Perturba ta.”</p>
-
-<p>In its first state, which I give here, together
-with its accompanying letterpress, the line of
-pub­li­ca­tion runs: “Gisling, Geneve, exc.” and
-the title:</p>
-
-<div class="dpoemlft"><div class="dstanzalft">
-<span class="spp00">Het beest van Babel is aan’t vluesten</span>
-<span class="spp00">Die Godsdienst heeft niet méer te duckten.</span>
-</div><div class="dstanzalft">
-<span class="spp00">(The beast of Babel is flying,</span>
-<span class="spp00">Religion has nothing more to fear.)</span>
-</div></div>
-
-<div class="dbigpicture" id="f2.21">
-<div class="dctr01 dhtml">
-<img src="images/i218.jpg" width="1200" height="966" alt="" />
-<div class="dcaption">Het beest van Babel, etc.
-(<i>The plate in its first state.</i>)</div></div>
-
-<div class="dctr02 dhandheld">
-<img src="images/i218-epubmobi.jpg" width="800" height="994" alt="" />
-<div class="dcaption">Het beest van Babel, etc.
-(<i>The plate in its first state.</i>)</div></div></div><!--dbigpicture-->
-
-<div class="dbigpicture" id="f2.22">
-<div class="dctr01 dhtml">
-<img src="images/i219.jpg" width="1400" height="900" alt="" />
-<div class="dcaption">Het beest van Babel, etc.
-(<i>The plate in its second state.</i>)</div></div>
-
-<div class="dctr03 dhandheld">
-<img src="images/i219-epubmobi.jpg" width="705" height="1096" alt="" />
-<div class="dcaption">Het beest van Babel, etc.
-(<i>The plate in its second state.</i>)</div></div></div><!--dbigpicture-->
-
-<p>The design is very elaborate and crowded with
-figures, those in the foreground being executed
-with considerable spirit. The Dutch Lion (1)
-carries a sword in its right front claws, as does
-that on the Persian flag of to-day. On its back
-rides William of Orange (7) with lance in rest
-and bearing a shield upon which St. Michael
-is represented combating sin in the shape of
-a dragon. William is supported by mounted
-soldiers, one of whom bears a
-flag inscribed with <span class="xxpn" id="p218">{218}</span>
-the words “Prot religion and libe”—(For religion
-and liberty). Over his head flies a winged Revenge
-(3) carrying a shield in one hand and the lightnings
-of God’s wrath in the other. Before him flies the
-seven-headed Beast of Babel (2), shorn of two of
-his heads, which lie bleeding on the ground beneath
-the lion. The monster, which “utters horrible
-shrieks,” bears upon its back between its wings
-Father Petre (6), who holds on his lap the infant
-Pretender (5), to whom his “brains have so
-infamously given birth.” The too-old infant
-carries in his hand the ever-present toy windmill.
-Blood pours from the decapitated necks of
-the Beast as he plunges with his accompanying
-rabble into the “pool of horrors.” Priests and
-other Romish officials, some mounted on goats,
-asses, and wolves, flee (4) or are trampled under
-foot (8).</p>
-
-<p>In the mid background William of Orange (9),
-by a poetic licence able to be in two places at
-once, a fairly common convention even in serious
-pictures of that and an earlier
-date,<a class="afnanc" href="#fn42" id="fnanc42">42</a>
-is being <span class="xxpn" id="p221">{221}</span>
-greeted by the English nobles as their saviour.
-To the left, through an archway, James II. (10) is
-seen fleeing by boat with his wife and infant,
-though, as a matter of fact, he remained in
-England some months after the latter were safely
-abroad. To the right, through another arch,
-Louis XIV. (11) is seen “embracing the child and
-taking pity on his mother,” and putting two of
-the curious, hearse-like carriages of the period at
-their disposal. Here we not only find Mary of
-Modena duplicated, but the infant Pretender
-triplicated in the same picture! So much for the
-plate in its first state.</p>
-
-<div class="dftnt">
-<p class="pfirst"><a class="afnlabel" href="#fnanc42" id="fn42">42</a>
-See, for example, Tintoret’s great picture of
-“Adam and Eve” in the Accademia at Venice.</p></div>
-
-<p>In its second and adapted state it takes its
-place in the armoury of the anti-Jesuits. The
-Jansenist controversy was at its height in the year
-of grace 1705, and Jansenism, although nominally
-subject to Rome, was regarded favourably by the
-Protestant Dutch as being a reforming movement
-within the Roman Catholic Church against the
-theological casuistry of the Jesuits.</p>
-
-<p>This is not the place to go into the anti-Jansenist
-polemics of the Jesuits since the pub­li­ca­tion
-of the “Augustinus” of
-1640, though the <span class="xxpn" id="p222">{222}</span>
-interest of the matter is sufficiently tempting.
-We must content ourselves with remembering that
-now at the beginning of a new century a supreme
-effort was being made by the Jesuits in France
-to destroy completely the pious community of
-Port Royal; that within four years they were to
-succeed in dispersing the nuns; within another
-year the cloister itself was to be pulled down;
-that in 1711 the very bodies of the departed
-members of the community were destined to be
-disinterred from the burial ground with the
-greatest brutalities and indecencies; and in 1713
-the church itself demolished.</p>
-
-<p>But, though Port Royal itself was doomed,
-Jansenism was finding freedom under the Protestant
-Government of Holland.</p>
-
-<p>In 1689 Archbishop Codde had been appointed
-by the Pope Vicar Apostolic in Holland. Soon,
-however, it was discovered by the Jesuits that he
-favoured the Jansenists.</p>
-
-<p>By the machinations of the Jesuits he was
-therefore <i>invited</i> to Rome, and treacherously
-detained there for <i>three years</i>, in defiance of all
-canonical regulations. In the
-meantime the Pope <span class="xxpn" id="p223">{223}</span>
-appointed Theodore de Cock in his place, with the
-intention of crushing the Jansenists in Holland.
-Codde thereupon made his escape from Rome,
-and the well-known struggle of the Jansenists of
-Utrecht and Haarlem for a legitimate episcopal
-succession began.</p>
-
-<p>This was the juncture at which our copperplate
-was to do duty a second time, and for such
-different ends.</p>
-
-<p>It has been divorced from its letterpress, altered
-in certain details and slightly cut away at the top
-and bottom. Like those dealing with the Head
-Smith and Tongue Sharpener, as will be seen in
-the next chapter, it has been appropriated to the
-uses of “Roma Perturbata.” It is now entitled
-on the panel which has been inserted at the spring
-of the arches “Door Munnike-Jagt, Word Babel
-Verkracht” (By chasing monks, Babel is assailed),
-and the piratical publisher has made many
-ingenious alterations. The possibly punning
-pub­li­ca­tion line runs: “Benedictus Antisolitarius
-excudit Rom.” Above this appears the chronograph:
-<span class="smmaj">“HOS</span>
-<span class="smmaj">HEROS</span>
-<span class="smcap">M<b>ONA</b>C<b>HOS</b></span>
-<span class="smcap"><b>APPREN</b>D<b>E</b></span>
-<span class="smcap"><b>BATA</b>V<b>E</b></span>
-<span class="smcap"><b>REBE</b>LL<b>ES</b>.”</span> <span class="xxpn" id="p224">{224}</span></p>
-
-<p>The Lion (1) still represents Holland and hunts
-the Beast of Babel (2) assisted by the winged
-Revenge (3), whose lightnings have now been
-increased to seven to represent the heraldic arrows
-of the Seven United Provinces. This device also
-now appears on the shield of Holland’s Knight
-(7) in place of that of St. Michael and the
-Dragon. The banner of his followers is now
-inscribed “Pro Secularibus.” As champion of
-the Jansenists the Knight puts to rout “all the
-bald heads (4, 4, 4, 4), together with ‘their
-protector Kok’” (6), who “in disguise” rides
-between the wings of the Beast with an illegitimate
-child (5) on his lap, from whose right
-hand the toy windmill of the infant Pretender
-has been removed. In the background to the
-left, others, in the quaint words of the Dutch
-letterpress (10), “escape quickly from the town
-by water, while they are clothed like gentlemen
-in order not to be known as monks.” In the
-background to the right, others flee “like great
-gentlemen in carriages,” a fairly ingenious adaptation
-of James II.’s flight and Louis’ welcome of
-the fugitives. <span class="xxpn" id="p225">{225}</span></p>
-
-<p>The group in the middle background is now
-made to represent Codde (8.B), who has escaped
-from Rome and is being welcomed back by the
-rep­re­sen­ta­tives of the
-State (9, 9).</p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="h2herein" id="p226">CHAPTER XI
-<span class="h2smallctr">
-ADAPTED OR PALIMPSEST PLATES
-(<i>continued</i>).</span></h2>
-
-<p class="pfirst"><span class="smcap">I<b>N</b></span>
-the last chapter I claim to have introduced the
-reader to a phase of print-collecting which has
-in it a sporting element of a peculiarly enticing
-character. The pursuit of what I have called
-palimpsest copperplates offers entertainment of
-the very best to one who would make it a
-speciality, and, perhaps, the most alluring thing
-about this curious quarry is that the hunter will
-never be satisfied after running it to earth until
-he has secured and coupled it in his portfolio with
-its necessary and enchanting fellow.</p></div>
-
-<p>I propose in this chapter to give a few more
-specimens of these curious adapted plates.</p>
-
-<p>Many examples of reheaded statues and adapted
-portraits lie around us. Mr. Augustus Hare tells
-of a rep­re­sen­ta­tion of Lady Georgina Fane in
-Brympton Church, which consists of
-the head of <span class="xxpn" id="p227">{227}</span>
-that ready-witted lady “added to the body of an
-ancestress who was headless,” whilst any visitor to
-Yarmouth Church, Isle of Wight, may see the
-imposing marble effigy of Admiral Sir Robert
-Holmes, which consists of the head of that
-gallant sailor surmounting the body of Louis
-XIV. It appears that Sir Robert, having
-captured the vessel in which the Italian-made
-torso of the Grand Monarque was being conveyed
-to France for the modelling of the head, retained
-the unfinished work and crowned it with his own
-august features—a good example of the resourcefulness
-of the English character.</p>
-
-<p>Again, Macaulay, enlarging upon the popularity of Frederick the
-Great in England, tells how at one time enthusiasm reached such a
-height that the sign-painters were everywhere employed in touching
-up the portraits of Admiral Vernon, which hung outside innumerable
-public-houses, into the likeness of the King of Prussia, a curious
-commentary, by the way, on the family motto, “Ver non semper virit.”<a
-class="afnanc" href="#fn43" id="fnanc43">43</a> Further, it is on
-record <span class="xxpn" id="p228">{228}</span> that after Trafalgar
-such was Nelson’s popularity, that Daniel Orme, engraver to George
-III., bought a plate of Napoleon at the sale of a Ludgate Hill
-printseller’s effects, and altered it into a portrait of our national
-hero.</p>
-
-<div class="dftnt">
-<p class="pfirst"><a class="afnlabel" href="#fnanc43" id="fn43">43</a>
-The following extract from a recent newspaper
-shows that the practice has not yet altogether died
-<span class="nowrap">out:—</span></p>
-
-<blockquote><p>
-“In the action of Tussaud <i>v.</i> Stiff, heard in the Chancery
-Division by
-Mr. Justice Buckley yesterday, the plaintiff, Mr. Louis
-Tussaud, sought to restrain defendant by injunction from
-carrying on his business of exhibiting models in such a
-way as to induce the public to believe that the models he
-showed were the work of the plaintiff. It was stated by the
-plaintiff’s counsel that, in consequence of an injunction
-granted some years ago, it became necessary for the
-plaintiff to carry on his exhibition as Louis Tussaud’s New
-Exhibition in Regent Street. It was afterwards turned into
-a limited liability company, and removed to the Alexandra
-Palace. Some of the models were sold to the defendant, but
-no goodwill of the business was sold. The defendant had
-since opened several exhibitions of waxworks, other models
-had been added to those sold by the plaintiff, and the
-models of the plaintiff had been split into a considerable
-number of pieces, while models made by other persons than
-the plaintiff were exhibited as Louis Tussaud’s waxworks.
-Counsel informed the Court that <i>in one case the head of
-the Archbishop of Canterbury had been put on the body
-of Charles Peace, and in another instance Napoleon was
-represented as taking part in the execution of Mary Queen
-of Scots</i>. The defendant’s present exhibition was a penny
-show in the Edgware Road. <i>In another instance the head of
-Mr. Ritchie, the Chancellor of the Exchequer, was put upon
-a dying soldier.</i>”</p></blockquote>
-
-<p>The Mr. Louis Tussaud here mentioned must not be confused
-with Mr. John Tussaud of the Marylebone Road Exhibition.</p></div>
-
-<p>Examples such as these might be multiplied, but
-here are enough for our purpose. They show that
-the systematic practice of copperplate adaptation
-has its counterpart in other departments of art.</p>
-
-<div class="dbigpicture" id="f2.23">
-<div class="dctr01 dhtml">
-<img src="images/i229a.jpg" width="1200" height="955" alt="" />
-<div class="dcaption">Aan der Meester Tonge-Slyper.
-(<i>The plate in its first state</i>)</div></div>
-
-<div class="dctr01 dhandheld">
-<img src="images/i229a-epubmobi.jpg" width="800" height="637" alt="" />
-<div class="dcaption">Aan der Meester Tonge-Slyper.
-(<i>The plate in its first state</i>)</div></div>
-
-<div class="dctr01 dhtml">
-<img src="images/i229b.jpg" width="1200" height="793" alt="" />
-<div class="dcaption">Aan der Meester Tonge-Slyper.
-<i>As adapted by the Anti-Jesuits</i></div></div>
-
-<div class="dctr01 dhandheld">
-<img src="images/i229b-epubmobi.jpg" width="800" height="529" alt="" />
-<div class="dcaption">Aan der Meester Tonge-Slyper.
-<i>As adapted by the Anti-Jesuits</i></div>
-</div></div><!--dbigpicture-->
-
-<p>We will now consider a
-curious broadside <span class="xxpn" id="p230">{230}</span>
-published about the year 1688, the copperplate
-heading of which was destined to be seized upon
-and adapted to other purposes nearly twenty years
-later by the piratical publisher referred to in the
-last chapter.</p>
-
-<p>As will be seen from our re­pro­duc­tion, its letterpress
-is addressed, “Aan der Meester Tonge-Slyper”
-(“To the Master Tongue Grinder”).
-The engraver’s name does not appear, but the
-work is easily dis­tin­guished as that of Jean
-Bollard, by comparing it with other signed engravings
-of the same series of pictorial satires.</p>
-
-<p>Two men at a grindstone sharpen a tongue,
-Another tongue lies on the anvil. Two labourers
-empty a large hamper of tongues into a basket,
-which is steadied by a woman. Point is given to
-the picture by the gossiping groups seen through
-the door and window, and especially by the two
-Xantippes who, with arms akimbo, are slanging
-each other in good earnest.</p>
-
-<p>The doggerel letterpress refers to the birth of
-the Old Pretender, and the mendacious tongues of
-the conspirators are being delivered to the smith
-to be coerced into
-speaking the truth. <span class="xxpn" id="p231">{231}</span></p>
-
-<p>Here is a free translation of the passage,
-beginning “Heden zyn my over
-<span class="nowrap">London”:—</span></p>
-
-<blockquote>
-<p>“To-day I received from London a cargo of those goods
-which you have to take in hand; I have some of the biggest
-size, <i>The Admiral of the First Flag</i>, which has been used so
-much and has become black from lying, and which, after all
-appearances, seems to have had his end bitten off; scrape
-thoroughly his thick skin or he will be up to anything;
-swearing oaths, breaking bonds, falsely protecting the
-Church is his daily work.”</p></blockquote>
-
-<p>And so on, until it ends with the
-<span class="nowrap">moral:—</span></p>
-
-<div class="dpoemctr"><div class="dstanzactr">
-<span class="spquoteverse"><span class="spquoteblock">“</span>Nothing
- more useful than whetting the tongue</span>
-<span class="spp00">When its aim is to speak the truth.</span>
-<span class="spp00">But when it is given to lying,</span>
-<span class="spp00">It must be pierced, flayed, and scraped.”</span>
-</div></div>
-
-<p>So much for the plate in its first state. In its
-second we find it published seventeen years later,
-and somewhat ingeniously adapted to the new
-exigencies. It now takes its place in the armoury
-of the anti-Jesuits, and is published without any
-acknowledgment in the pamphlet, entitled <i>Roma
-Pertubata Ofte’t Beroerde Romen, etc., etc.</i>,
-referred to in the last chapter. This pamphlet,
-which is a very warren of palimpsest plates (it has
-at least four, and possibly there
-are others), may <span class="xxpn" id="p232">{232}</span>
-be seen in the print-room of the British Museum.
-It may, too, as I have myself proved, be discovered
-at rare intervals in the shops of the old printsellers
-in Holland. Mine is in a parti-coloured paper
-wrapper, whether as issued or added later I
-cannot say. It consists of title-page, table of
-contents, and eleven full-page copperplate engravings
-of ex­traor­di­nary interest. Curiously enough,
-the table of contents makes no reference to the
-eleventh and last. Our palimpsest is number
-9.<a class="afnanc" href="#fn44" id="fnanc44">44</a></p>
-
-<div class="dftnt">
-<p class="pfirst"><a class="afnlabel" href="#fnanc44" id="fn44">44</a>
-Grateful acknowledgments are here due to the
-splendid <i>Catalogue of Prints and Drawings in the British
-Museum</i>, 5 vols., which should be in the library of every
-collector of satirical prints.</p></div>
-
-<p>In its new surroundings it has (<i>vide</i> re­pro­duc­tion)
-been divorced from its letterpress, and been
-cut away at the bottom. A descriptive panel has
-been engraved over the doorway, and other lettering
-added here and there. The pub­li­ca­tion line,
-“tot Tongeren by J: la Langue,” apparently a
-bogus one, playing on the words of the original,
-“à Langres chez Tongelel,” now appears within
-the border of the design.</p>
-
-<p>The tongue which lies on the anvil is now
-pierced by the seven heraldic arrows of the Dutch
-Provinces, and words are engraved
-below to the <span class="xxpn" id="p233">{233}</span>
-effect that “There is no worse evil than that a
-Pope’s tongue dares slander the State,” and on
-the base of the anvil, “He has given way to
-slander. You must forge him before you grind
-him.”</p>
-
-<p>Below the quarrelling women are the words:
-“These maids are quarrelling for de Kok,” referring
-to scandals which were afloat concerning the
-morality of the Pope’s vicar-general, and a Latin
-chronograph appears at the feet of the chief smith.</p>
-
-<p>The inscription over the door gives directions
-to “The Romish Dutch Grinder of Tongues,”
-and, amongst other things, says of the tongue on
-the anvil, “That is de Kok’s tongue, wounded by
-seven arrows, because he has slandered the State
-by his speech,” which statement hardly tallies with
-the inscription on the anvil, unless the vicar-general
-may be regarded as the very mouthpiece
-of the Pope.</p>
-
-<p>This is no place, as I have said, to enlarge upon
-the Jansenist propagandum, but it will well repay
-the enthusiastic historian to follow out the above
-allusions to their original source.</p>
-
-<p>So much for our adapted broadside.</p>
-
-<div class="dbigpicture" id="f2.24">
-<div class="dctr03 dhtml" id="p234">
-<img src="images/i234.png" width="972" height="1604" alt="" />
-<div class="dcaption">The Stature of a
-Great Man, or the English Colossus</div></div>
-
-<div class="dctr04 dhandheld">
-<img src="images/i234-epubmobi-a.jpg" width="679" height="1120" alt="" />
-<div class="dcaption">The Stature of a
-Great Man, or the English Colossus</div></div>
-
-<div class="dctr01 dhandheld">
-<img src="images/i234-epubmobi-b.png" width="800" height="272" alt="" />
-<div class="dcaption">[English Colossus, detail for
- epub/mobi editions]</div></div>
-</div><!--dbigpicture-->
-
-<div class="dbigpicture" id="f2.25">
-<div class="dctr03 dhtml" id="p235">
-<img src="images/i235.png" width="1028" height="1610" alt="" />
-<div class="dcaption">The Stature of a
-Great Man, or the Scotch Colossus</div></div>
-
-<div class="dctr04 dhandheld">
-<img src="images/i235-epubmobi.png" width="543" height="850" alt="" />
-<div class="dcaption">The Stature of a
-Great Man, or the Scotch Colossus</div></div>
-</div><!--dbigpicture-->
-
-<p>I would ask you now to look at the two prints
-entitled respectively “The Stature of a Great
-Man, or the English Colossus,” and “The Stature
-of a Great Man, or the SCOTCH Colossus.”</p>
-
-<div><span class="xxpn" id="p236">{236}</span></div>
-
-<p>The first, dated 1740, represents Sir Robert
-Walpole, then in the plenitude of his power. He
-stands on two woolpacks. Between his legs is
-seen the British fleet lying inactive. He is
-flanked by Marines on the left crying “Let us
-fight,” and sailors with drawn swords on the right
-declaring their readiness to die “Pro Patriâ.” The
-plate teems with allusions to his reluctance to
-go to war, by which he was subjecting his
-country to the insults and aggressions of Spain
-and France.</p>
-
-<p>Twenty-two years later the plate was resurrected
-and altered to its second state, in which it
-is made to represent Lord Bute. The lower part
-of the plate, bearing the quotation from Shakespeare
-and the “Description,” has been now cut
-away, and “Scotch” inserted in the place of
-“English” in the title. The chief alterations are
-the reduction of the full-bottomed wig and the
-addition of a wig-tie of black
-ribbon, the addition <span class="xxpn" id="p237">{237}</span>
-of a star on the breast, and a new and abusive
-inscription on the right-hand document. In this
-case the adapter has shown but little ingenuity.</p>
-
-<div class="dbigpicture" id="f1.24">
-<div class="dctr01 dhtml">
-<img src="images/i236fp.jpg" width="1001" height="836" alt="" />
-<div class="dcaption">Queen Anne presiding over the House of Lords.
-(<i>The plate in its first state</i>)</div></div>
-
-<div class="dctr02 dhandheld">
-<img src="images/i236fp-epubmobi.jpg" width="800" height="958" alt="" />
-<div class="dcaption">Queen Anne presiding over the House of Lords.
-(<i>The plate in its first state</i>)</div></div>
-</div><!--dbigpicture-->
-
-<div class="dbigpicture" id="f1.25">
-<div class="dctr01 dhtml">
-<img src="images/i237fp.jpg" width="1200" height="892" alt="" />
-<div class="dcaption"><i>The plate in its second state, now representing</i>
-George I. presiding over the House of Lords</div></div>
-
-<div class="dctr03 dhandheld">
-<img src="images/i237fp-epubmobi.jpg" width="800" height="1076" alt="" />
-<div class="dcaption"><i>The plate in its second state, now representing</i>
-George I. presiding over the House of Lords</div></div></div><!--dbigpicture-->
-
-<p>We will now turn to a far more elaborate
-example, which, in its first state, as will be seen
-in the re­pro­duc­tion, represents Queen Anne presiding
-in state over the House of Lords. The
-plate is etched by Romeyn de Hooghe.</p>
-
-<p>At the top of the picture, between female
-figures representing Plenty and War, is suspended
-a cloth, on which the Queen is shown presiding
-over the House of Commons. At her side sits
-Prince George of Denmark. The whole is surmounted
-by the words, “Het Hoog en Lager
-Huys van Engeland.” Left and right of the cloth
-are scrolls bearing the legends, “Hinc gloria
-regni” and “Hinc felicitas publica.”</p>
-
-<p>At the base of the plate are two small self-contained
-etchings. That on the left shows the
-heralds proclaiming the Queen; that on the right
-shows Her Majesty sitting in Council. Between
-these are inscribed the following
-<span class="nowrap">words:—</span></p>
-
-<div class="padtopc">“Annæ D. G.</div>
-<div class="">Magnæ Britanniæ Reginæ,” etc., etc.</div>
-
-<p class="padtopc" id="p238">The
-main design is crowded with details and
-figures of the utmost interest, any description of
-which is forbidden by the space at my disposal.
-The artist’s signature is to be seen on the floor of
-the Hall.</p>
-
-<p>Thirteen years were now to elapse before it was
-transformed into the glorification of George I.
-The King now takes the place of the late Queen
-in the House of Lords. The throne in the House
-of Commons is vacant. The inscription on the
-cloth has been re-engraved, and “Engeland”
-changed to “Engelandt.” The title and the
-panels at the bottom of the plate have been cut
-away, and the index numbers on the main design
-and the index letters on the cloth have been
-altered. The designer’s name has been removed
-from the floor of the House, and engraved on the
-right-hand corner of the plate.</p>
-
-<p>These are the main differences. The curious
-reader may occupy himself in discovering others.</p>
-
-<p>The next example here reproduced I give
-because of the peculiarly drastic changes which
-have been made by the pirate into whose hands
-the plate has fallen. <span class="xxpn" id="p239">{239}</span></p>
-
-<div class="dbigpicture" id="f1.26">
-<div class="dctr01 dhtml">
-<img src="images/i238fp.jpg" width="1400" height="971" alt="" />
-<div class="dcaption">“The Races of the Europeans, with their
-Keys.” (<i>The plate in its first state</i>)</div></div>
-
-<div class="dctr03 dhandheld">
-<img src="images/i238fp-epubmobi.jpg" width="750" height="1082" alt="" />
-<div class="dcaption">“The Races of the Europeans, with their
-Keys.” (<i>The plate in its first state</i>)</div></div></div><!--dbigpicture-->
-
-<div class="dbigpicture" id="f1.27">
-<div class="dctr01 dhtml">
-<img src="images/i239fp.jpg" width="1400" height="966" alt="" />
-<div class="dcaption">“A Skit on Britain.” (<i>The plate in its
-second state</i>)</div></div>
-
-<div class="dctr03 dhandheld">
-<img src="images/i239fp-epubmobi.jpg" width="750" height="1087" alt="" />
-<div class="dcaption">“A Skit on Britain.” (<i>The plate in its
-second state</i>)</div></div></div><!--dbigpicture-->
-
-<p>In its original state it bears the punning title,
-“The Races of the Europeans with their Keys.”
-The line of pub­li­ca­tion runs:—“Geo. Bickham,
-jun<sup>r.,</sup> inv<sup>t.</sup> et sculp. According to the late Act,
-1740. Price 1s. Sold at ye Black Moors Head
-against Surry Street in y<sup>e</sup> Strand.” The composite
-design is made up of variorum copies of four
-separate prints recently published. These are
-enclosed in the four quarters of an elaborate
-design, surmounted by a crouching wolf. At the
-point where the four corners meet is a grotesque
-horned head. At the foot are a mask and a
-poniard. Each panel is differently dated, and
-surmounts its own set of explanatory notes. The
-allusions to contemporary politics are most ingeniously
-conceived, but are so numerous that
-space forbids even their barest description.</p>
-
-<p>In its second state the plate is entitled “A Skit
-on Britain.” The line of pub­li­ca­tion runs the same
-as before, saving the name of the artist, which has
-been changed into “Ged Bilchham.” A line of
-script has also been added on this copy, which
-states that “This plate is upon the same copper
-as ‘The Races of the Europeans,’
-much of the <span class="xxpn" id="p240">{240}</span>
-allusions not having been obliterated,” which seems
-considerably to understate the case. The enclosing
-design is certainly much the same as before, though
-in this there are many alterations in detail, but of
-the four engravings by far the greater portion has
-been removed. The aerial parts are practically
-untouched, but of the crowds of figures only a
-few unimportant groups remain. All the tables
-of reference have been burnished out, and are
-replaced by doggerel verses. The dates have been
-removed from the four compartments, and in the
-places of three of them appear “Porto Bello, Nov.
-1739,” “Cartagena,” and “The Havana,” while the
-fourth is left blank. The main part of the satire
-is directed against the policy of Sir Robert
-Walpole, but is of too elaborate a nature to
-be entered upon here.</p>
-
-<div class="dctr03" id="f1.28">
-<img src="images/i240fp.jpg" width="800" height="1223" alt="" />
-<div class="dcaption">The Headless Horseman.
-(<i>The plate with the head burnished out.</i>)</div></div>
-
-<p>Before concluding this account of palimpsest
-plates I shall reproduce three very curious prints
-in which the substitution of one head for another
-is more than usually
-outrageous.<a class="afnanc" href="#fn45" id="fnanc45">45</a>
-The original <span class="xxpn" id="p241">{241}</span>
-engraving was by Pierre Lombart after a made-up
-portrait of Charles I., on horseback, professing to
-be by Vandyck.</p>
-
-<div class="dftnt">
-<p class="pfirst"><a class="afnlabel" href="#fnanc45" id="fn45">45</a>
-The earliest example of the artist as Headsman
-that I have come across is a very rare portrait of Queen
-Elizabeth, full length, seated on a throne, dressed in a
-robe of state, holding globe and sceptre, engraved about
-1590. The Queen’s figure was subsequently burnished
-out, and that of James I. substituted. This,
-unfortunately, I do not possess.</p></div>
-
-<p>The plate was executed before the execution
-(save the mark!) of the Martyr King. After his
-death the head of Cromwell was substituted, no
-doubt for commercial purposes. Finally, Charles
-the First’s head was restored (again save the
-mark!) after the Restoration. Our re­pro­duc­tions
-are from what would seem to be the second, third,
-and fourth states of the plate though a first state
-is not known. It will be observed that, in the
-earliest—namely, that in which the head has been
-removed altogether—the scarf is brought across
-the left shoulder, and tied under the right arm,
-whilst the page-boy has bands and frills to his
-breeches. In the next, or third state, in which
-Cromwell’s head has been inserted, the scarf has
-been removed from the shoulder, and is tied round
-the waist, whilst the bands and frills have been
-removed from the page-boy’s nether garments. In
-the next, or fourth stage of the
-plate, in which <span class="xxpn" id="p242">{242}</span>
-Charles’s head has been re-inserted, there are,
-besides the substitution of one head for the other,
-a few minor alterations, such as the addition of the
-Cavalier moustache to the face of the page-boy,
-the restoration of the frills to his breeches, the
-alteration of the pattern of the rider’s collar, the
-addition of the order of St. George to the rider’s
-breast, and the substitution of the royal coat of
-arms for those of the Protector at the bottom of
-the engraving. There are also other known states
-of the plate, re­pro­duc­tions of which may be seen
-in Mr. Alfred Whitman’s <i>Print-Collector’s Handbook</i>.
-These were unknown to me when I wrote
-the above description.<a class="afnanc" href="#fn46" id="fnanc46">46</a></p>
-
-<div class="dftnt">
-<p class="pfirst"><a class="afnlabel" href="#fnanc46" id="fn46">46</a>
-Since writing this I paid a visit to the Hall
-of the Middle Temple, when the very intelligent custodian
-told me that Cromwell ordered the great Vandyck, which
-hangs over the high table, to be taken down, and his own
-somewhat repellent countenance painted in in the place
-of that of Charles I. Fortunately for posterity this
-outrageous order was not carried out. The whole affair
-reminds one of the unconsciously grim entry in a certain
-bookseller’s catalogue which ran, “Memoirs of Charles the
-First with a head <i>capitally executed</i>.”</p></div>
-
-<div class="dctr03" id="f1.29">
-<img src="images/i242fp.jpg" width="800" height="1228" alt="" />
-<div class="dcaption">The plate with Cromwell’s head</div></div>
-
-<div class="dctr03" id="f1.30">
-<img src="images/i243fp.jpg" width="800" height="1244" alt="" />
-<div class="dcaption">The plate with Charles I.’s head</div></div>
-
-<p>So much for historical instances of putting new
-heads on old shoulders. But, if I am not mistaken,
-the very modern restoration of the west front of
-one of our great cathedrals shows a late Dean’s
-head surmounting the body of a
-saint or king, <span class="xxpn" id="p243">{243}</span>
-which had been mutilated by Cromwell. It would
-be cruel, perhaps, to be more specific, as vanity
-is not the most pleasing of the Christian virtues.</p>
-
-<p>Again, there was lately a good deal of laughter
-caused by one of the whims of the German
-Emperor. It appears that his artistic eye had
-been offended by the incompleteness of a fine
-headless torso which was brought to the fatherland
-some years since. Everything, he was aware,
-could be <i>made in Germany</i>, so what more natural
-than to offer a prize for the best completion of the
-work of a Phidias or a Praxiteles? <i>Finis coronat
-opus</i>, and the sculptors of Germany were called
-upon to compete. None of the results, however,
-satisfied His Imperial Majesty, and two of the
-artists have been commissioned to try again.
-Would it be <i>lese-majestie</i> to suggest that there is
-only one head in Germany that would prove quite
-acceptable? I present the idea to the competitors.</p>
-
-<p>Enough has been written to show that the
-pursuit of the palimpsest plate is sport of the
-very finest for the collector, for it is a sport
-which does not cease with the running of the
-quarry to earth. <span class="xxpn" id="p244">{244}</span></p>
-
-<p>I have reproduced, without comment, opposite
-pages <a href="#f1.31" title="go to fig. 1.31">244</a>
-and 246, and on pages 245, 247, and 249,
-a few more of these adapted copperplates for the
-sake of any one who may be fortunate enough to
-possess either the original or the palimpsest. He
-will find it no bad sport to go hunting for its
-fellow.</p>
-
-<div class="dctr03" id="f1.31">
-<img src="images/i244fp-a.jpg" width="800" height="1178" alt="" />
-<div class="dcaption">Undescribed palimpsest plate.
- (<i>First state</i>)</div></div>
-<div class="dctr03">
-<img src="images/i244fp-b.jpg" width="800" height="1186" alt="" />
-<div class="dcaption">Undescribed palimpsest plate.
-<br />(<i>Second state.</i>)</div></div>
-
-<div class="dctr01" id="f2.26">
-<img id="p245"
- src="images/i245a.jpg" width="800" height="612" alt="" />
-<div class="dcaption">Aan
-den Experten Hollandichen Hoofd-Smith.<br />
-(<i>The plate in its first state</i>)</div></div>
-
-<div class="dctr01" id="f2.27">
-<img src="images/i245b.jpg" width="800" height="528" alt="" />
-<div class="dcaption">Aan
-den Experten Hollandichen Hoofd-Smith.<br />
-(<i>As adapted by the Anti-Jesuits</i>)</div></div>
-
-<div class="dctr01" id="f1.32">
-<img src="images/i246fp.jpg" width="800" height="596" alt="" />
-<div class="dcaption">
-<table class="caption-table" summary="">
-<tr>
- <td><div>First state</div></td>
- <td><div>Second state</div></td></tr>
-<tr>
- <td colspan="2"><div>Undescribed palimpsest plate.</div></td></tr></table>
-</div></div>
-
-<div><span class="xxpn" id="p247">{247}</span></div>
-
-<div class="dctr02" id="f2.28">
-<img src="images/i247a.jpg" width="800" height="956" alt="" />
-<div class="dcaption">An adapted Copperplate.
-<i>First state</i></div></div>
-
-<div class="dctr02" id="f2.29">
-<img src="images/i247b.jpg" width="800" height="984" alt="" />
-<div class="dcaption">An adapted Copperplate.
-<i>Second state</i></div></div>
-
-<div class="dbigpicture" id="f2.30">
-<div class="dctr01 dhtml" id="p249">
-<img src="images/i249a.jpg" width="1280" height="799" alt="" />
-<div class="dcaption">A History of the New Plot.
-<i>First state</i></div></div>
-
-<div class="dctr04 dhandheld">
-<img src="images/i249a-epubmobi.jpg" width="799" height="1280" alt="" />
-<div class="dcaption">A History of the New Plot.
-<i>First state</i></div></div></div><!--dbigpicture-->
-
-<div class="dbigpicture" id="f2.31">
-<div class="dctr01 dhtml">
-<img src="images/i249b.jpg" width="1280" height="681" alt="" />
-<div class="dcaption">A History of the New Plot.
-<i>Second state</i></div></div>
-
-<div class="dctr05 dhandheld">
-<img src="images/i249b-epubmobi.jpg" width="681" height="1280" alt="" />
-<div class="dcaption">A History of the New Plot.
-<i>Second state</i></div></div></div><!--dbigpicture-->
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="h2herein" id="p251">INDEX</h2></div>
-
-<p class="pindx">“Aan den Experten Hollandschen Hoofd-Smith,”
- <a href="#p216" title="go to p. 216">216</a>,
- <a href="#p243" title="go to p. 243">243</a></p>
-
-<p class="pindx">“Aan der Meester Tonge-Slyper,”
- <a href="#p216" title="go to p. 216">216</a>,
- <a href="#p230" title="go to p. 230">230</a>–<a
- href="#p233" title="go to p. 233">233</a></p>
-
-<p class="pindx">ADAPTED COPPER PLATES,
- <a href="#p192" title="go to p. 192">192</a>–247</p>
-
-<p class="pindx">Ainsworth, Harrison,
- <a href="#p003" title="go to p. 3">3</a></p>
-
-<p class="pindx">Alken, Henry,
- <a href="#p157" title="go to p. 157">157</a>–160</p>
-
-<p class="pindx">Allen, Archdeacon,
- <a href="#p010" title="go to p. 10">10</a></p>
-
-<p class="pindx"><i>American Notes</i>,
- <a href="#p002" title="go to p. 2">2</a></p>
-
-<p class="pindx">Anne, Queen,
- <a href="#p237" title="go to p. 237">237</a>,
- <a href="#p238" title="go to p. 238">238</a></p>
-
-<p class="pindx"><i>Antiquities of Westminster</i>,
- <a href="#p150" title="go to p. 150">150</a>–153</p>
-
-<p class="pindx"><i>A Pop-Gun fired off by George Cruikshank</i>,
- <a href="#p079" title="go to p. 79">79</a></p>
-
-<p class="pindx">“A Skit on Britain,”
- <a href="#p239" title="go to p. 239">239</a>,
- <a href="#p240" title="go to p. 240">240</a></p>
-
-<p class="pindx">“A Trifling Mistake,”
- <a href="#p070" title="go to p. 70">70</a>–73</p>
-
-<p class="pindx"><i>Ballad of Beau Brocade, The</i>,
- <a href="#p003" title="go to p. 3">3</a></p>
-
-<p class="pindx">“Becky Sharp,”
- <a href="#p010" title="go to p. 10">10</a></p>
-
-<p class="pindx"><i>Bentley’s Miscellany</i>,
- <a href="#p043" title="go to p. 43">43</a>–52</p>
-
-<p class="pindx">Bewick’s <i>Birds</i>,
- <a href="#p068" title="go to p. 68">68</a></p>
-
-<p class="pindx"><i>Book of Snobs</i>,
- <a href="#p009" title="go to p. 9">9</a></p>
-
-<p class="pindx">“Breeches” Bible, Barker’s,
- <a href="#p002" title="go to p. 2">2</a></p>
-
-<p class="pindx">Brougham, Lord,
- <a href="#p062" title="go to p. 62">62</a></p>
-
-<p class="pindx">Browne, H. K.,
- <a href="#p027" title="go to p. 27">27</a>,
- <a href="#p028" title="go to p. 28">28</a>,
- <a href="#p029" title="go to p. 29">29</a>,
- <a href="#p031" title="go to p. 31">31</a>,
- <a href="#p033" title="go to p. 33">33</a>,
- <a href="#p054" title="go to p. 54">54</a>–56</p>
-
-<p class="pindx">Bruton, Mr. H. W.
- <a href="#p048" title="go to p. 48">48</a>,
- <a href="#p049" title="go to p. 49">49</a>,
- <a href="#p069" title="go to p. 69">69</a>,
- <a href="#p075" title="go to p. 75">75</a>,
- <a href="#p081" title="go to p. 81">81</a></p>
-
-<p class="pindx">Buffon, M.,
- <a href="#p005" title="go to p. 5">5</a></p>
-
-<p class="pindx">Bunn, Alfred,
- <a href="#p010" title="go to p. 10">10</a></p>
-
-<p class="pindx">Burlington, Earl of,
- <a href="#p098" title="go to p. 98">98</a>–107</p>
-
-<p class="pindx">“Burlington Gate,”
- <a href="#p108" title="go to p. 108">108</a></p>
-
-<p class="pindx">Burns, Robert,
- <a href="#p002" title="go to p. 2">2</a></p>
-
-<p class="pindx">Buss, Miss F. M.,
- <a href="#p034" title="go to p. 34">34</a></p>
-
-<p class="pindx">Buss, R. W.,
- <a href="#p029" title="go to p. 29">29</a>,
- <a href="#p030" title="go to p. 30">30</a>,
- <a href="#p031" title="go to p. 31">31</a>,
- <a href="#p032" title="go to p. 32">32</a>,
- <a href="#p033" title="go to p. 33">33</a>,
- <a href="#p034" title="go to p. 34">34</a></p>
-
-<p class="pindx">Bute, Lord,
- <a href="#p235" title="go to p. 235">235</a>,
- <a href="#p236" title="go to p. 236">236</a></p>
-
-<p class="pindx">Calcraft, Captain Granby,
- <a href="#p009" title="go to p. 9">9</a></p>
-
-<p class="pindx">Capel, Monsignor,
- <a href="#p002" title="go to p. 2">2</a></p>
-
-<p class="pindx">“Captain Granby Tiptoff,”
- <a href="#p009" title="go to p. 9">9</a></p>
-
-<p class="pindx">“Captain Shindy,”
- <a href="#p009" title="go to p. 9">9</a></p>
-
-<p class="pindx">Carteret, Lord,
- <a href="#p112" title="go to p. 112">112</a> <i>et seq.</i></p>
-
-<p class="pindx"><i>Catalogue of Prints and Drawings in the British Museum</i>,
- <a href="#p092" title="go to p. 92">92</a>
-<i>et passim</i>,
- <a href="#p198" title="go to p. 198">198</a> <i>et passim</i></p>
-
-<p class="pindx">Chandos, Duke of,
- <a href="#p101" title="go to p. 101">101</a></p>
-
-<p class="pindx">Chapman and Hall, Messrs.,
- <a href="#p033" title="go to p. 33">33</a>,
- <a href="#p055" title="go to p. 55">55</a></p>
-
-<p class="pindx">Charles I.,
- <a href="#p241" title="go to p. 241">241</a>–242</p>
-
-<p class="pindx"><i>Charles Dickens, The Story of his Life</i>,
- <a href="#p027" title="go to p. 27">27</a></p>
-
-<p class="pindx">Churchill, Charles,
- <a href="#p107" title="go to p. 107">107</a>–111</p>
-
-<p class="pindx"><i>Clarissa Harlowe</i>,
- <a href="#p005" title="go to p. 5">5</a></p>
-
-<p class="pindx"><i>Coaching Days and Coaching Ways</i>,
- <a href="#p175" title="go to p. 175">175</a>–178</p>
-
-<p class="pindx">Cochrane, Lord,
- <a href="#p065" title="go to p. 65">65</a></p>
-
-<p class="pindx"><i>Coningsby</i>,
- <a href="#p012" title="go to p. 12">12</a>,
- <a href="#p013" title="go to p. 13">13</a>,
- <a href="#p020" title="go to p. 20">20</a></p>
-
-<p class="pindx">Cowell, Professor,
- <a href="#p184" title="go to p. 184">184</a>–186</p>
-
-<p class="pindx">Crawhall, Joseph,
- <a href="#p135" title="go to p. 135">135</a>–138</p>
-
-<p class="pindx">“Credulity, Superstition, and Fanaticism: a Medley,”
- <a href="#p088" title="go to p. 88">88</a> <i>et seq.</i></p>
-
-<p class="pindx">Croker, J. W.,
- <a href="#p012" title="go to p. 12">12</a></p>
-
-<p class="pindx">Cromek, R. H.,
- <a href="#p005" title="go to p. 5">5</a></p>
-
-<p class="pindx">Cromwell, Oliver,
- <a href="#p241" title="go to p. 241">241</a>,
- <a href="#p242" title="go to p. 242">242</a></p>
-
-<p class="pindx">Cruikshank, George,
- <a href="#p042" title="go to p. 42">42</a>,
- <a href="#p045" title="go to p. 45">45</a>–54,
- <a href="#p059" title="go to p. 59">59</a>–81,
- <a href="#p161" title="go to p. 161">161</a></p>
-
-<p class="pindx"><i>Cruikshank’s Portraits of Himself</i>,
- <a href="#p080" title="go to p. 80">80</a></p>
-
-<p class="pindx">Cumberland, Duke of,
- <a href="#p060" title="go to p. 60">60</a>–69</p>
-
-<p class="pindx">Cumberland, Princess Olive of,
- <a href="#p062" title="go to p. 62">62</a></p>
-
-<p class="pindx">“Danaë in the Brazen Chamber,”
- <a href="#p140" title="go to p. 140">140</a>–148</p>
-
-<p class="pindx"><i>Death in London</i>,
- <a href="#p154" title="go to p. 154">154</a>–158</p>
-
-<p class="pindx">Dexter, Mr. J. P.,
- <a href="#p041" title="go to p. 41">41</a></p>
-
-<p class="pindx"><i>D’Horsay; or the Follies of the Day, by a Man of Fashion</i>,
- <a href="#p013" title="go to p. 13">13</a></p>
-
-<p class="pindx"><i>Dickens and his Illustrators</i>,
- <a href="#p040" title="go to p. 40">40</a>,
- <a href="#p041" title="go to p. 41">41</a></p>
-
-<p class="pindx">Dickens, Charles,
- <a href="#p002" title="go to p. 2">2</a>,
- <a href="#p026" title="go to p. 26">26</a> <i>et seq.</i> his <i>American Notes</i>,
- <a href="#p002" title="go to p. 2">2</a>
-his suppressed portrait,
- <a href="#p027" title="go to p. 27">27</a>,
- <a href="#p028" title="go to p. 28">28</a></p>
-
-<p class="pindx"><i>Dickens Memento</i>,
- <a href="#p047" title="go to p. 47">47</a></p>
-
-<p class="pindx"><i>Dictionary of National Biography</i>,
- <a href="#p061" title="go to p. 61">61</a>,
- <a href="#p062" title="go to p. 62">62</a></p>
-
-<p class="pindx">Dighton, Richard,
- <a href="#p025" title="go to p. 25">25</a></p>
-
-<p class="pindx">Disraeli, Benjamin,
- <a href="#p002" title="go to p. 2">2</a>,
- <a href="#p010" title="go to p. 10">10</a>,
- <a href="#p012" title="go to p. 12">12</a>,
- <a href="#p131" title="go to p. 131">131</a>–134</p>
-
-<p class="pindx">Dobson, Mr. Austin,
- <a href="#p003" title="go to p. 3">3</a>,
- <a href="#p082" title="go to p. 82">82</a> <i>et passim</i>,
- <a href="#p174" title="go to p. 174">174</a></p>
-
-<p class="pindx"><i>Don Quixote</i>,
- <a href="#p113" title="go to p. 113">113</a> <i>et seq.</i></p>
-
-<p class="pindx">“Don Quixote releases the Galley Slaves,”
- <a href="#p118" title="go to p. 118">118</a>,
- <a href="#f2.16" title="go to fig. 2.16">122</a></p>
-
-<p class="pindx">“Don Quixote seizes the Barber’s Basin,”
- <a href="#p118" title="go to p. 118">118</a>,
- <a href="#f2.15" title="go to fig. 2.15">120</a></p>
-
-<p class="pindx">“Drop it!”,
- <a href="#p078" title="go to p. 78">78</a></p>
-
-<p class="pindx">Du Maurier, George,
- <a href="#p162" title="go to p. 162">162</a>–173</p>
-
-<p class="pindx">Edwards, Edwin,
- <a href="#p179" title="go to p. 179">179</a>–191</p>
-
-<p class="pindx">Elizabeth, Queen,
- <a href="#p240" title="go to p. 240">240</a></p>
-
-<p class="pindx">“Enthusiasm Delineated,”
- <a href="#p083" title="go to p. 83">83</a> <i>et seq.</i></p>
-
-<p class="pindx"><i>Essay on the Genius of George Cruikshank</i>,
- <a href="#p077" title="go to p. 77">77</a></p>
-
-<p class="pindx">Fane, Lady Georgina,
- <a href="#p226" title="go to p. 226">226</a></p>
-
-<p class="pindx">Fanus i Khiyal,
- <a href="#p185" title="go to p. 185">185</a>–191</p>
-
-<p class="pindx"><i>Figaro in London</i>,
- <a href="#p063" title="go to p. 63">63</a>,
- <a href="#p064" title="go to p. 64">64</a></p>
-
-<p class="pindx">“Financial Survey of Cumberland or the Beggar’s Petition,”
- <a href="#p060" title="go to p. 60">60</a></p>
-
-<p class="pindx">FitzGerald, Edward,
- <a href="#p040" title="go to p. 40">40</a>,
- <a href="#p179" title="go to p. 179">179</a>–191</p>
-
-<p class="pindx">Frederick the Great,
- <a href="#p227" title="go to p. 227">227</a></p>
-
-<p class="pindx">Garrick Club, The,
- <a href="#p008" title="go to p. 8">8</a>,
- <a href="#p009" title="go to p. 9">9</a></p>
-
-<p class="pindx">George I.,
- <a href="#p238" title="go to p. 238">238</a></p>
-
-<p class="pindx">George IV.,
- <a href="#p011" title="go to p. 11">11</a></p>
-
-<p class="pindx">“George Garbage,”
- <a href="#p009" title="go to p. 9">9</a></p>
-
-<p class="pindx">Gray, J. M.,
- <a href="#p148" title="go to p. 148">148</a></p>
-
-<p class="pindx"><i>Grimm’s Fairy Tales</i>,
- <a href="#p042" title="go to p. 42">42</a></p>
-
-<p class="pindx">“Harry Foker,”
- <a href="#p009" title="go to p. 9">9</a></p>
-
-<p class="pindx">Hertford, Marchioness of,
- <a href="#p075" title="go to p. 75">75</a></p>
-
-<p class="pindx">Hertford, Marquis of,
- <a href="#p010" title="go to p. 10">10</a> <i>et seq.</i></p>
-
-<p class="pindx"><i>History of Pickwick</i>,
- <a href="#p029" title="go to p. 29">29</a></p>
-
-<p class="pindx">Hobhouse, John Cam,
- <a href="#p070" title="go to p. 70">70</a>–73</p>
-
-<p class="pindx"><i>Hogarth Illustrated</i>,
- <a href="#p084" title="go to p. 84">84</a></p>
-
-<p class="pindx">Hogarth, William,
- <a href="#p082" title="go to p. 82">82</a> <i>et seq.</i></p>
-
-<p class="pindx">Holmes, Sir Robert,
- <a href="#p227" title="go to p. 227">227</a></p>
-
-<p class="pindx">Hook, Theodore,
- <a href="#p009" title="go to p. 9">9</a>,
- <a href="#p010" title="go to p. 10">10</a></p>
-
-<p class="pindx">Ireland, John,
- <a href="#p084" title="go to p. 84">84</a> <i>et seq.</i>,
- <a href="#p113" title="go to p. 113">113</a> <i>et seq.</i></p>
-
-<p class="pindx">Irving, Washington,
- <a href="#p002" title="go to p. 2">2</a></p>
-
-<p class="pindx"><i>Italian Tales</i>,
- <a href="#p074" title="go to p. 74">74</a></p>
-
-<p class="pindx"><i>Italy</i>,
- <a href="#p003" title="go to p. 3">3</a></p>
-
-<p class="pindx">James I.,
- <a href="#p241" title="go to p. 241">241</a></p>
-
-<p class="pindx">Jansenists, the,
- <a href="#p221" title="go to p. 221">221</a> <i>et seq.</i></p>
-
-<p class="pindx">Jesuits, The,
- <a href="#p221" title="go to p. 221">221</a> <i>et seq.</i></p>
-
-<p class="pindx">“Joe Sibley,”
- <a href="#p163" title="go to p. 163">163</a>–173</p>
-
-<p class="pindx">Jones, W. N.,
- <a href="#p068" title="go to p. 68">68</a></p>
-
-<p class="pindx"><i>Jorrocks’s Jaunts and Jollities</i>,
- <a href="#p158" title="go to p. 158">158</a></p>
-
-<p class="pindx">Keene, Charles,
- <a href="#p127" title="go to p. 127">127</a>–139</p>
-
-<p class="pindx">Kitton, F. G.,
- <a href="#p040" title="go to p. 40">40</a></p>
-
-<p class="pindx">“Lady Kew,”
- <a href="#p010" title="go to p. 10">10</a>,
- <a href="#p022" title="go to p. 22">22</a></p>
-
-<p class="pindx">Langford, Lady,
- <a href="#p010" title="go to p. 10">10</a></p>
-
-<p class="pindx">Lawrence, Sir Thomas,
- <a href="#p019" title="go to p. 19">19</a></p>
-
-<p class="pindx">Leech, John,
- <a href="#p033" title="go to p. 33">33</a>,
- <a href="#p036" title="go to p. 36">36</a>–38,
- <a href="#p040" title="go to p. 40">40</a>,
- <a href="#p041" title="go to p. 41">41</a></p>
-
-<p class="pindx">“L’Europe alarmée pour le Fils d’un Meunier,”
- <a href="#p202" title="go to p. 202">202</a>–216</p>
-
-<p class="pindx"><i>Life of Dickens</i>,
- <a href="#p037" title="go to p. 37">37</a>,
- <a href="#p046" title="go to p. 46">46</a></p>
-
-<p class="pindx"><i>Lippincott’s Magazine</i>,
- <a href="#p010" title="go to p. 10">10</a></p>
-
-<p class="pindx">“Lord Walham,”
- <a href="#p023" title="go to p. 23">23</a></p>
-
-<p class="pindx"><i>Lothair</i>,
- <a href="#p002" title="go to p. 2">2</a></p>
-
-<p class="pindx">“Marquis of Hereford,”
- <a href="#p014" title="go to p. 14">14</a></p>
-
-<p class="pindx"><i>Martin Chuzzlewit</i>,
- <a href="#p026" title="go to p. 26">26</a>,
- <a href="#p053" title="go to p. 53">53</a></p>
-
-<p class="pindx">“Monsignor Catesby,”
- <a href="#p002" title="go to p. 2">2</a></p>
-
-<p class="pindx">“Mr. Dolphin,”
- <a href="#p010" title="go to p. 10">10</a></p>
-
-<p class="pindx">“Mr. John Jorrocks,”
- <a href="#p158" title="go to p. 158">158</a>–161</p>
-
-<p class="pindx">“Mr. Pickwick at the Review,”
- <a href="#p033" title="go to p. 33">33</a></p>
-
-<p class="pindx">“Mr.” Pitt Crawley,
- <a href="#p015" title="go to p. 15">15</a></p>
-
-<p class="pindx"><i>Mr. Thackeray, Mr. Yates, and the Garrick Club</i>,
- <a href="#p008" title="go to p. 8">8</a></p>
-
-<p class="pindx">“Mr. Wardle and his Friends under the Influence of the Salmon,”
- <a href="#p033" title="go to p. 33">33</a></p>
-
-<p class="pindx">“Mr. Winkle’s First Shot,”
- <a href="#p033" title="go to p. 33">33</a></p>
-
-<p class="pindx">Napoleon, Emperor,
- <a href="#p228" title="go to p. 228">228</a></p>
-
-<p class="pindx">Nelson, Lord,
- <a href="#p228" title="go to p. 228">228</a></p>
-
-<p class="pindx"><i>Oliver Twist</i>,
- <a href="#p026" title="go to p. 26">26</a>,
- <a href="#p043" title="go to p. 43">43</a>–52</p>
-
-<p class="pindx"><i>Once a Week</i>,
- <a href="#p127" title="go to p. 127">127</a>,
- <a href="#p140" title="go to p. 140">140</a>–148</p>
-
-<p class="pindx">Orange, William of,
- <a href="#p217" title="go to p. 217">217</a> <i>et seq.</i></p>
-
-<p class="pindx">Pailthorpe, Mr. F. W.,
- <a href="#p056" title="go to p. 56">56</a></p>
-
-<p class="pindx"><i>Pall Mall Gazette</i>,
- <a href="#p166" title="go to p. 166">166</a>–169</p>
-
-<p class="pindx">Palmer, Samuel,
- <a href="#p056" title="go to p. 56">56</a></p>
-
-<p class="pindx"><i>Pendennis</i>,
- <a href="#p009" title="go to p. 9">9</a></p>
-
-<p class="pindx"><i>Penelope’s English Experiences</i>,
- <a href="#p038" title="go to p. 38">38</a></p>
-
-<p class="pindx">Phillimore, Mr. F.,
- <a href="#p047" title="go to p. 47">47</a></p>
-
-<p class="pindx">“Philoprogenitiveness,”
- <a href="#p077" title="go to p. 77">77</a>,
- <a href="#p078" title="go to p. 78">78</a></p>
-
-<p class="pindx"><i>Pickwick</i>,
- <a href="#p026" title="go to p. 26">26</a>,
- <a href="#p028" title="go to p. 28">28</a> <i>et seq.</i>,
- <a href="#p043" title="go to p. 43">43</a></p>
-
-<p class="pindx"><i>Pictures from Italy</i>,
- <a href="#p056" title="go to p. 56">56</a></p>
-
-<p class="pindx">Pine’s Horace,
- <a href="#p054" title="go to p. 54">54</a></p>
-
-<p class="pindx"><i>Poems</i>, Burns’s,
- <a href="#p002" title="go to p. 2">2</a></p>
-
-<p class="pindx">Pope, Alexander,
- <a href="#p098" title="go to p. 98">98</a>–107</p>
-
-<p class="pindx">Price, Stephen,
- <a href="#p009" title="go to p. 9">9</a></p>
-
-<p class="pindx">Prideaux, Colonel,
- <a href="#p190" title="go to p. 190">190</a>–191</p>
-
-<p class="pindx"><i>Punch</i>,
- <a href="#p127" title="go to p. 127">127</a> <i>et seq.</i></p>
-
-<p class="pindx">Queensberry, Duke of,
- <a href="#p023" title="go to p. 23">23</a></p>
-
-<p class="pindx">Reid’s <i>Catalogue of George Cruikshank’s Works</i>,
- <a href="#p045" title="go to p. 45">45</a>,
- <a href="#p062" title="go to p. 62">62</a>,
- <a href="#p069" title="go to p. 69">69</a></p>
-
-<p class="pindx">Ritchie, Mrs.,
- <a href="#p010" title="go to p. 10">10</a></p>
-
-<p class="pindx">Robertson, J. C.,
- <a href="#p154" title="go to p. 154">154</a>–158</p>
-
-<p class="pindx">Rogers, Samuel,
- <a href="#p003" title="go to p. 3">3</a></p>
-
-<p class="pindx">“Roma Perturbata, Ofte’t Beroerde Romen, etc.,”
- <a href="#p216" title="go to p. 216">216</a> <i>et seq.</i></p>
-
-<p class="pindx">“Rose Maylie and Oliver at Agnes’s Tomb,”
- <a href="#p045" title="go to p. 45">45</a> <i>et seq.</i></p>
-
-<p class="pindx">Roxborough, Duke of,
- <a href="#p002" title="go to p. 2">2</a></p>
-
-<p class="pindx">“Royal Hobbys of the Hertfordshire Cock Horse,”
- <a href="#p075" title="go to p. 75">75</a></p>
-
-<p class="pindx">Ruskin, John,
- <a href="#p003" title="go to p. 3">3</a>,
- <a href="#p004" title="go to p. 4">4</a></p>
-
-<p class="pindx">Sala, G. A.,
- <a href="#p030" title="go to p. 30">30</a>,
- <a href="#p040" title="go to p. 40">40</a></p>
-
-<p class="pindx">Sandys, Frederick,
- <a href="#p127" title="go to p. 127">127</a>,
- <a href="#p139" title="go to p. 139">139</a>–148</p>
-
-<p class="pindx">Scott, Sir Walter,
- <a href="#p002" title="go to p. 2">2</a></p>
-
-<p class="pindx">Seymour, Robert,
- <a href="#p029" title="go to p. 29">29</a>,
- <a href="#p031" title="go to p. 31">31</a></p>
-
-<p class="pindx">“Sholto Percy,”
- <a href="#p154" title="go to p. 154">154</a>–158</p>
-
-<p class="pindx"><i>Sketch Book</i>, Washington Irving’s,
- <a href="#p002" title="go to p. 2">2</a></p>
-
-<p class="pindx"><i>Sketches by Boz</i>,
- <a href="#p055" title="go to p. 55">55</a>,
- <a href="#p057" title="go to p. 57">57</a>,
- <a href="#p058" title="go to p. 58">58</a></p>
-
-<p class="pindx">Smith, J. T.,
- <a href="#p150" title="go to p. 150">150</a></p>
-
-<p class="pindx">Smith, Wyndham,
- <a href="#p009" title="go to p. 9">9</a></p>
-
-<p class="pindx">Spielmann, Mr. M. H.,
- <a href="#p128" title="go to p. 128">128</a> <i>et passim</i></p>
-
-<p class="pindx"><i>Sporting Snobs</i>,
- <a href="#p009" title="go to p. 9">9</a></p>
-
-<p class="pindx">Stanislaus Hoax,
- <a href="#p010" title="go to p. 10">10</a></p>
-
-<p class="pindx">Stephens, F. G.,
- <a href="#p088" title="go to p. 88">88</a></p>
-
-<p class="pindx">Stothard, T.,
- <a href="#p005" title="go to p. 5">5</a></p>
-
-<p class="pindx">Stuart, James Francis Edward,
- <a href="#p198" title="go to p. 198">198</a> <i>et seq.</i></p>
-
-<p class="pindx">SUPPRESSED PLATES,
- <a href="#p001" title="go to p. 1">1</a>–191</p>
-
-<p class="pindx">Surtees, R.,
- <a href="#p158" title="go to p. 158">158</a></p>
-
-<p class="pindx">Swain, Mr. Joseph,
- <a href="#p140" title="go to p. 140">140</a>–148</p>
-
-<p class="pindx"><i>Talpa</i>,
- <a href="#p078" title="go to p. 78">78</a></p>
-
-<p class="pindx">Tenniel, Sir John,
- <a href="#p133" title="go to p. 133">133</a></p>
-
-<p class="pindx">Thackeray, W. M.,
- <a href="#p007" title="go to p. 7">7</a> <i>et seq.</i></p>
-
-<p class="pindx"><i>The Artist</i>,
- <a href="#p145" title="go to p. 145">145</a></p>
-
-<p class="pindx"><i>The Battle of Life</i>,
- <a href="#p026" title="go to p. 26">26</a>,
- <a href="#p034" title="go to p. 34">34</a>–40</p>
-
-<p class="pindx"><i>The Battle of London Life;</i> or
-<i>Boz and his Secretary</i>,
- <a href="#p039" title="go to p. 39">39</a></p>
-
-<p class="pindx">“The Bruiser,”
- <a href="#p110" title="go to p. 110">110</a>,
- <a href="#p111" title="go to p. 111">111</a></p>
-
-<p class="pindx"><i>The Builder</i>,
- <a href="#p107" title="go to p. 107">107</a></p>
-
-<p class="pindx"><i>The Chimes</i>,
- <a href="#p036" title="go to p. 36">36</a>,
- <a href="#p041" title="go to p. 41">41</a></p>
-
-<p class="pindx"><i>The Christmas Carol</i>,
- <a href="#p036" title="go to p. 36">36</a></p>
-
-<p class="pindx">“The Cricket Match,”
- <a href="#p029" title="go to p. 29">29</a>,
- <a href="#p032" title="go to p. 32">32</a></p>
-
-<p class="pindx">“The Curate and the Barber,”
- <a href="#p121" title="go to p. 121">121</a>,
- <a href="#f2.18" title="go to fig. 2.18">125</a></p>
-
-<p class="pindx">“The Dead Rider,”
- <a href="#p074" title="go to p. 74">74</a></p>
-
-<p class="pindx">“The Fireside Scene,”
- <a href="#p026" title="go to p. 26">26</a>,
- <a href="#p044" title="go to p. 44">44</a> <i>et seq.</i></p>
-
-<p class="pindx">“The First Interview,”
- <a href="#p121" title="go to p. 121">121</a>,
- <a href="#f2.17" title="go to fig. 2.17">123</a></p>
-
-<p class="pindx">“The Free and Easy,”
- <a href="#p057" title="go to p. 57">57</a></p>
-
-<p class="pindx">“The Funeral of Chrysostom,”
- <a href="#p116" title="go to p. 116">116</a></p>
-
-<p class="pindx"><i>The History of Punch</i>,
- <a href="#p128" title="go to p. 128">128</a> <i>et seq.</i></p>
-
-<p class="pindx"><i>The Hobby Horse</i>,
- <a href="#p144" title="go to p. 144">144</a></p>
-
-<p class="pindx">“The Innkeeper,”
- <a href="#p114" title="go to p. 114">114</a></p>
-
-<p class="pindx">“The Innkeeper’s Wife and Daughter,”
- <a href="#p118" title="go to p. 118">118</a></p>
-
-<p class="pindx">“The Last Song,”
- <a href="#p042" title="go to p. 42">42</a></p>
-
-<p class="pindx">“The Man of Taste,”
- <a href="#p098" title="go to p. 98">98</a>–107</p>
-
-<p class="pindx" id="p254">“The Marquis of Steyne,”
- <a href="#p007" title="go to p. 7">7</a> <i>et seq.</i></p>
-
-<p class="pindx"><i>The Memoirs of Joseph Grimaldi</i>,
- <a href="#p041" title="go to p. 41">41</a>,
- <a href="#p042" title="go to p. 42">42</a></p>
-
-<p class="pindx"><i>The Newcomes</i>,
- <a href="#p022" title="go to p. 22">22</a></p>
-
-<p class="pindx">“The Painted Chamber,”
- <a href="#p150" title="go to p. 150">150</a>–153</p>
-
-<p class="pindx">“The Races of the Europeans with their Keys,”
- <a href="#p239" title="go to p. 239">239</a></p>
-
-<p class="pindx"><i>The Ruba’iyat</i> of Omar Khayyam,
- <a href="#p179" title="go to p. 179">179</a>–191</p>
-
-<p class="pindx"><i>The Speaker</i>,
- <a href="#p021" title="go to p. 21">21</a></p>
-
-<p class="pindx">“The Stature of a Great Man, or The English Colossus,”
- <a href="#p236" title="go to p. 236">236</a></p>
-
-<p class="pindx">“The Stature of a Great Man, or The Scotch Colossus,”
- <a href="#p236" title="go to p. 236">236</a></p>
-
-<p class="pindx"><i>The Strange Gentleman</i>,
- <a href="#p054" title="go to p. 54">54</a>,
- <a href="#p055" title="go to p. 55">55</a></p>
-
-<p class="pindx">“The Street of the Tombs, Pompeii,”
- <a href="#p056" title="go to p. 56">56</a></p>
-
-<p class="pindx"><i>The Times</i>,
- <a href="#f2.11" title="go to fig. 2.11">109</a></p>
-
-<p class="pindx"><i>The Tower of London</i>,
- <a href="#p003" title="go to p. 3">3</a></p>
-
-<p class="pindx">“The Two Apprentices,”
- <a href="#p163" title="go to p. 163">163</a>–173</p>
-
-<p class="pindx"><i>The Two Paths</i>,
- <a href="#p003" title="go to p. 3">3</a></p>
-
-<p class="pindx"><i>The Vicar of Wakefield</i>,
- <a href="#p171" title="go to p. 171">171</a>–175</p>
-
-<p class="pindx"><i>The Virginians</i>,
- <a href="#p009" title="go to p. 9">9</a></p>
-
-<p class="pindx">“The Worship of Wealth,”
- <a href="#p053" title="go to p. 53">53</a>,
- <a href="#p054" title="go to p. 54">54</a></p>
-
-<p class="pindx">Thomson, Mr. Hugh,
- <a href="#p003" title="go to p. 3">3</a>,
- <a href="#p171" title="go to p. 171">171</a>–178</p>
-
-<p class="pindx">Thornhill, Sir James,
- <a href="#p111" title="go to p. 111">111</a>,
- <a href="#p112" title="go to p. 112">112</a></p>
-
-<p class="pindx">“Tom Smart and the Chair,”
- <a href="#p033" title="go to p. 33">33</a></p>
-
-<p class="pindx"><i>Town Talk</i>,
- <a href="#p008" title="go to p. 8">8</a>,
- <a href="#p009" title="go to p. 9">9</a></p>
-
-<p class="pindx"><i>Trilby</i>,
- <a href="#p162" title="go to p. 162">162</a>–173</p>
-
-<p class="pindx">Tristram, Mr. Outram,
- <a href="#p175" title="go to p. 175">175</a></p>
-
-<p class="pindx">Truman, Edwin,
- <a href="#p069" title="go to p. 69">69</a></p>
-
-<p class="pindx">“Tupman and Rachel,”
- <a href="#p029" title="go to p. 29">29</a>,
- <a href="#p032" title="go to p. 32">32</a></p>
-
-<p class="pindx">Van der Banck, Johan,
- <a href="#p112" title="go to p. 112">112</a>,
- <a href="#p113" title="go to p. 113">113</a></p>
-
-<p class="pindx"><i>Vanity Fair</i>,
- <a href="#p007" title="go to p. 7">7</a> <i>et seq.</i></p>
-
-<p class="pindx">Vernon, Admiral,
- <a href="#p227" title="go to p. 227">227</a></p>
-
-<p class="pindx"><i>Vivian Grey</i>,
- <a href="#p010" title="go to p. 10">10</a></p>
-
-<p class="pindx">Wallace, Sir Richard,
- <a href="#p020" title="go to p. 20">20</a>,
- <a href="#p022" title="go to p. 22">22</a></p>
-
-<p class="pindx">Walpole, Horace,
- <a href="#p025" title="go to p. 25">25</a></p>
-
-<p class="pindx">Walpole, Sir Robert,
- <a href="#p234" title="go to p. 234">234</a>,
- <a href="#p236" title="go to p. 236">236</a></p>
-
-<p class="pindx"><i>Westminster Review</i>,
- <a href="#p078" title="go to p. 78">78</a></p>
-
-<p class="pindx">Whistler, James M’N.,
- <a href="#p163" title="go to p. 163">163</a>–173</p>
-
-<p class="pindx">Wilde, Oscar,
- <a href="#p168" title="go to p. 168">168</a></p>
-
-<p class="pindx">Wilkes, John,
- <a href="#f2.11" title="go to fig. 2.11">109</a>–111</p>
-
-<div class="dkeeptgth">
-
-<p class="pindx">Yates, Edmund,
- <a href="#p008" title="go to p. 8">8</a>,
- <a href="#p009" title="go to p. 9">9</a></p>
-
-<div class="padtopa">THE END</div>
-
-<div class="fsz8 padtopa"><i>Printed by</i>
- R. &amp; R. <span class="smcap">C<b>LARK,</b></span>
- <span class="smcap">L<b>IMITED,</b></span>
- <i>Edinburgh</i>.</div></div>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="h2herein" title="ADVERTISEMENTS">&#xa0;</h2></div>
-
-<div class="fsz2">KATE GREENAWAY</div>
-
-<div class="fsz7">BY</div>
-
-<div class="fsz5">M. H. SPIELMANN AND G. S. LAYARD.</div>
-
-<p>Containing upwards of 80 full-page illus­tra­tions (53 in
-colour, reproduced from original water-colour drawings by
-Kate Greenaway.) Square demy 8vo, cloth, gilt top, with
-Kate Greenaway end-papers, price 20s. net.</p>
-
-<div><i>SOME PRESS OPINIONS</i></div>
-
-<blockquote>
-<p>“This delightful volume, with its scores of il­lus­trat­ed letters, and
-sketches and charming pictures, will be very widely welcomed. No one
-could wish for a more satisfactory memorial of the artist and her work.”—<i>Daily
-Graphic.</i></p>
-
-<p>“Whether as regards its subject, its letterpress, or its illus­tra­tions,
-this is one of the most delightful, as it is likely to become one of the most
-popular volumes of the series to which it belongs.”—<i>Aberdeen Journal.</i></p>
-
-<p>“Certainly one of the most beautiful monuments that could be erected
-to the memory of a modest artist.”—<i>Daily Mail.</i></p>
-
-<p>“By reason of its sympathetic treatment of an intensely interesting
-subject, of the charm, the quality, and the profusion of its illus­tra­tions, and
-of the faultless taste of its get-up, should rank among the favourite
-gift-books
-of the approaching Christmas season.”—<i>Observer.</i></p>
-
-<p>“A book which will delight young and old by its engaging charm.”—<i>Jewish
-World.</i></p>
-
-<p>“The volume, magnificent to behold, is a deeply interesting one to
-read, and should be peculiarly attractive to our readers.”—<i>Gentlewoman.</i></p>
-
-<p>“This delightful book should prove a capital present to give to young
-folks at Christmas time. The pictures in it are very beautiful, while the
-story of Kate Greenaway’s fight for fame is sympathetically told.”—<i>Scottish
-Review.</i></p>
-
-<p>“The book is admirably done, thorough, sympathetic, and
- accurate.”—<i>Outlook.</i></p></blockquote>
-
-<div class="section padtopb">
-<div class="fsz2">BIRKET FOSTER</div>
-
-<div class="fsz5">By H. M. CUNDALL, F.S.A.</div>
-
-<p>Containing 91 full-page illus­tra­tions (73 in colour) and
-numerous thumbnail sketches in the text. Square demy 8vo,
-cloth, gilt top, price 20s. net.</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>It may safely be asserted, without fear of contradiction, that the dainty water-colour
-drawings executed by Birket Foster appeal to the majority of the British public more
-than the works of any other artist. He produced scenes from nature with such exactness
-and minuteness of detail that the most uninitiated in art are able to understand
-and appreciate them, but the chief features in his paintings are the poetic feeling with
-which he endued them, and the care with which his compositions were selected. He
-revelled in sunny landscapes with roaming sheep and with rustic children playing in
-the foreground, and in the peaceful red-bricked cottages with thatched roofs; it is,
-perhaps, by these scenes of rural England that Birket Foster is best known. He, however,
-was an indefatigable painter, and produced works selected from all parts of
-England, Wales, and Scotland; he travelled frequently on the Continent; Venice, as
-well as the Rhine, had its charms for him, and the picturesque scenery of Brittany has
-also been portrayed by his brush.</p>
-
-<p>The collection of Birket Foster’s drawings reproduced in this volume is thoroughly
-rep­re­sen­ta­tive, and is sufficiently extensive to include all phases of his work. The
-accompanying biographical text by Mr. H. M. Cundall will be found to be most
-sympathetic, intimate, and interesting.</p></blockquote>
-
-<div class="fsz7">A. &amp; C. BLACK, SOHO SQUARE, LONDON, W.</div></div>
-
-<div class="section padtopb">
-<div class="fsz2">GEORGE MORLAND</div>
-
-<div class="fsz5">By Sir WALTER GILBEY, Bart.</div>
-
-<div class="fsz7">AUTHOR OF “THE LIFE OF GEORGE STUBBS, R.A.”</div>
-
-<p>Containing 60 full-page re­pro­duc­tions in colour of the
-artist’s best work. Square demy 8vo, cloth, gilt top, price
-20s. net.</p>
-
-<p>There will also be an Édition de Luxe, with letterpress printed on
-handmade paper, containing the earliest impressions of the illus­tra­tions,
-and limited to 250 signed and numbered copies, price £2: 2s. net.</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>There is plenty of room for another Morland book, especially when written by the
-greatest living authority upon the works of the artist, and where the illus­tra­tions are
-reproduced, with most excellent results, from masterpieces loaned from private collections
-hitherto mostly unknown to the artistic public, and of which only a few have either been
-engraved or gravured—at all events, not before reproduced in colour.</p>
-
-<p>George Morland’s work is characterised by its great strength and beauty of colouring.
-To reproduce so many of his choicest pictures, and bring the book into this series, is no easy
-matter, but to ensure success the publishers have spared no efforts to make their re­pro­duc­tions
-worthy of the artist’s work and entirely satisfying to the collector and student.</p>
-
-<p>The collection of pictures reproduced in this volume is thoroughly rep­re­sen­ta­tive, and
-each illus­tra­tion is a gem; they show the several phases of Morland’s charming scenes
-of English life in the renowned Academician’s time.</p>
-
-<p>The student and all collectors and admirers of Morland will also rejoice to have the
-appreciative text by Sir Walter Gilbey.</p></blockquote>
-
-<div class="fsz7">A. &amp; C. BLACK, SOHO SQUARE, LONDON, W.</div></div>
-
-<div class="transnote">
-<h2 class="h2herein">TRANSCRIBER’S NOTE</h2>
-
-<p>Original spelling and grammar have been generally retained,
-with some exceptions noted below. Original printed page
-numbers are shown like this: {52}.
-Footnotes have
-been relabeled 1–46, and moved from within paragraphs
-to nearby locations between paragraphs. The transcriber
-produced the cover image and hereby assigns it to the
-public domain. Original page images are available from
-archive.org—search for “suppressedplates00laya”.</p>
-
-<p>The List of Illustrations contains two divisions, those that were
-printed upon numbered pages, and those that were printed on unnumbered
-pages. Most illus­tra­tions originally printed inside paragraphs of
-text have been moved to nearby locations between paragraphs, and the
-corresponding page numbers have been removed as necessary to maintain
-proper order of the remaining page numbers. Captions of Illustrations
-were sometimes altered to conform more closely—in substance or in
-typography—to the titles in the List of Illustrations (LOI). In such
-cases, the original captions (if any) are nevertheless retained as part
-of the image. On page
- <a href="#p172" title="go to p. 172">172</a>, a caption was inserted where none had been
-printed, to match the LOI.</p>
-
-<p>The illustrations all appeared to the transcriber to have been
-grayscale when initially published, but had naturally aged to a yellowed antique
-white background. Illustrations have been edited with primary intent to
-preserve the original image, but changed to grayscale, with secondary
-motives to improve brightness and contrast, and to improve readability
-of small or faint text. The illustrations in the epub and mobi editions
-must be severely restricted in size. Some of the illustrations in this
-book are so large and detailed that the size restrictions significantly
-degrade the quality of the images. Therefore some, for example two
-illustrations originally between pages
-<a href="#f1.14" title="go to figs. 1.14 and 1.15">88 and 89,</a>
-have been
-divided into two or three fragments for the epub/mobi editions.
-Each fragment was (perhaps) individually edited for brightness and
-contrast to improve the readability of any text. The illustrations
-originally on pages
-<a href="#f2.5" title="go to fig. 2.5">71</a> and
-<a href="#f2.24" title="go to fig. 2.24">234</a>
-regretfully remain quite poor in quality
-in the epub/mobi editions. Separate detail images showing much of the
-text portions of these two illustrations
-at better quality have been provided for the epub/mobi
-editions. Several of the illustrations have been rotated to achieve
-better quality in the epub/mobi editions while adhering to the image
-size restrictions.</p>
-
-<p class="padtopc">Page
- <a href="#p010" title="go to p. 10">10</a>.
- “protoype” to “prototype”.</p>
-
-<p>Page
- <a href="#p212" title="go to p. 212">212</a>.
- “fireband” to “firebrand”.</p>
-
-<p>Page
- <a href="#p254" title="go to p. 254">254</a>.
- “Whistler, James M‘N” to “Whistler, James M’N”.</p>
-</div>
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-<pre>
-
-
-
-
-
-End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Suppressed Plates, Wood-engravings, &c., by
-George Somes Layard
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