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- Published / Created:
- [not before 1818]
- Call Number:
- Drawings Un58 no. 99 Box D166
- Image Count:
- 2
- Resource Type:
- still image
- Abstract:
- Watercolor drawing of a grotesque old woman, with lines from Thomas Cambell's poem "Pleasures of Hope" (1799) written in ink below: The world was sad, The garden was a wild, And man the hermit sigh'd 'till woman smil'd.
- Description:
- Title devised by cataloger., Unsigned; artist unidentified., Drawn on paper watermarked "J. Whatman Turkey Hill, 1818." Probably a leaf from an album., and On the verso a cropped impression of Plate 21, from the Miseries of London, captioned with a letterpress text cut from the work: See BMSat 10865: At the corner of Chancery Lane a fashionably dressed man and a scavenger have collided violently: both register pain and anger. Hackney coachmen on a stand facing the end of the street watch with amusement. A man behind (left) chases his hat, 1 March 1807.
- Subject (Topic):
- Women and Older people
- Found in:
- Lewis Walpole Library > [Caricature of a grotesque old woman] [art original].