- Creator:
- Hogarth, William, 1697-1764, printmaker
- Published / Created:
- published according to act of Parliament, Feb. 1, 1751.
- Call Number:
- Folio 75 H67 800 v.2 (Oversize)
- Collection Title:
- Plate 76. Queen Charlotte's collection of Hogarth works. Leaf 52. Album of William Hogarth prints.
- Image Count:
- 1
- Resource Type:
- still image
- Abstract:
- In a London street, young boys inflict various forms of cruelty upon animals. In the centre, a boy (Tom Nero), identifiable by the badge on his shoulder as a pupil of St. Giles's Parish School, thrusts an arrow into a dog's anus; he ignores the offer of a large tart from a sympathetic young gentleman (said by Paulson to be a compliment to the young George III). To his left on the front of the balustrade, a boy draws a prophetic picture of Tom hanging from the gallows. Below Tom, another boy ties a bone to a dog's tail. In the lower left, a dog disembowels a cat. In the center foreground another boy kneels on the cobblestones, about to release a cock, as another boy prepares to a stick at it; the boy behind him holds a second cock. On the balustrade one boy holds a torch while his companion blinds a bird with a wire. Further to the left on the balustrade a group of boys laugh at the sight of two cats fight as they are hung by their tails from a gibbet-shaped lamp post. Above them a cat with a pair of wings tied to its back has been tossed out the attic window to see if it could fly
- Description:
- Title engraved above image., State, publisher, and series title from Paulson., First in a series of four: The four stages of cruelty., Quotation engraved below image: "While various scenes of sportive woe, the infant race employ, and tortur'd victims bleeding shew, the tyrant in the boy. Behold! A youth of gentler heart, to spare the creature's pain. O take, he cries - take all my tart, but tears and tart are vain. Learn from this fair example - you whom savage sports delight, how cruelty disgusts the view while pity charms the sight.", and On page 155 in volume 2. Sheet trimmed within plate mark to: 37.6 x 30.8 cm.
- Publisher:
- Wm. Hogarth
- Subject (Topic):
- Animal fighting, Balustrades, Boys, Cats, Cockfighting, Dogs, Gallows, Lampposts, Punishment & torture, and Rake's progress
- Found in:
- Lewis Walpole Library > First stage of cruelty [graphic]
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- Creator:
- Hogarth, William, 1697-1764, printmaker
- Published / Created:
- published according to act of Parliament, Feb. 1, 1751.
- Call Number:
- Sotheby 69++ Box 315
- Collection Title:
- Plate 76. Queen Charlotte's collection of Hogarth works. Leaf 52. Album of William Hogarth prints.
- Image Count:
- 1
- Resource Type:
- still image
- Abstract:
- In a London street, young boys inflict various forms of cruelty upon animals. In the centre, a boy (Tom Nero), identifiable by the badge on his shoulder as a pupil of St. Giles's Parish School, thrusts an arrow into a dog's anus; he ignores the offer of a large tart from a sympathetic young gentleman (said by Paulson to be a compliment to the young George III). To his left on the front of the balustrade, a boy draws a prophetic picture of Tom hanging from the gallows. Below Tom, another boy ties a bone to a dog's tail. In the lower left, a dog disembowels a cat. In the center foreground another boy kneels on the cobblestones, about to release a cock, as another boy prepares to a stick at it; the boy behind him holds a second cock. On the balustrade one boy holds a torch while his companion blinds a bird with a wire. Further to the left on the balustrade a group of boys laugh at the sight of two cats fight as they are hung by their tails from a gibbet-shaped lamp post. Above them a cat with a pair of wings tied to its back has been tossed out the attic window to see if it could fly
- Description:
- Title engraved above image., State, publisher, and series title from Paulson., First in a series of four: The four stages of cruelty., and Quotation engraved below image: "While various scenes of sportive woe, the infant race employ, and tortur'd victims bleeding shew, the tyrant in the boy. Behold! A youth of gentler heart, to spare the creature's pain. O take, he cries - take all my tart, but tears and tart are vain. Learn from this fair example - you whom savage sports delight, how cruelty disgusts the view while pity charms the sight."
- Publisher:
- Wm. Hogarth
- Subject (Topic):
- Animal fighting, Balustrades, Boys, Cats, Cockfighting, Dogs, Gallows, Lampposts, Punishment & torture, and Rake's progress
- Found in:
- Lewis Walpole Library > First stage of cruelty [graphic]
- Creator:
- Hogarth, William, 1697-1764, printmaker
- Published / Created:
- published according to act of Parliament, Feb. 1, 1751.
- Call Number:
- Kinnaird 53K(a) Box 215
- Collection Title:
- Plate 76. Queen Charlotte's collection of Hogarth works. Leaf 52. Album of William Hogarth prints.
- Image Count:
- 1
- Resource Type:
- still image
- Abstract:
- In a London street, young boys inflict various forms of cruelty upon animals. In the centre, a boy (Tom Nero), identifiable by the badge on his shoulder as a pupil of St. Giles's Parish School, thrusts an arrow into a dog's anus; he ignores the offer of a large tart from a sympathetic young gentleman (said by Paulson to be a compliment to the young George III). To his left on the front of the balustrade, a boy draws a prophetic picture of Tom hanging from the gallows. Below Tom, another boy ties a bone to a dog's tail. In the lower left, a dog disembowels a cat. In the center foreground another boy kneels on the cobblestones, about to release a cock, as another boy prepares to a stick at it; the boy behind him holds a second cock. On the balustrade one boy holds a torch while his companion blinds a bird with a wire. Further to the left on the balustrade a group of boys laugh at the sight of two cats fight as they are hung by their tails from a gibbet-shaped lamp post. Above them a cat with a pair of wings tied to its back has been tossed out the attic window to see if it could fly
- Description:
- Title engraved above image., State, publisher, and series title from Paulson., First in a series of four: The four stages of cruelty., Quotation engraved below image: "While various scenes of sportive woe, the infant race employ, and tortur'd victims bleeding shew, the tyrant in the boy. Behold! A youth of gentler heart, to spare the creature's pain. O take, he cries - take all my tart, but tears and tart are vain. Learn from this fair example - you whom savage sports delight, how cruelty disgusts the view while pity charms the sight.", and Sheet trimmed to 382 x 313 mm.
- Publisher:
- Wm. Hogarth
- Subject (Topic):
- Animal fighting, Balustrades, Boys, Cats, Cockfighting, Dogs, Gallows, Lampposts, Punishment & torture, and Rake's progress
- Found in:
- Lewis Walpole Library > First stage of cruelty [graphic]
- Creator:
- Hogarth, William, 1697-1764, printmaker
- Published / Created:
- published according to act of Parliament, Feb. 1, 1751 [that is, between 1790 and 1835]
- Call Number:
- Print20072
- Image Count:
- 1
- Resource Type:
- still image
- Abstract:
- In a London street, young boys inflict various forms of cruelty upon animals. In the centre, a boy (Tom Nero), identifiable by the badge on his shoulder as a pupil of St. Giles's Parish School, thrusts an arrow into a dog's anus; he ignores the offer of a large tart from a sympathetic young gentleman (said by Paulson to be a compliment to the young George III). To his left on the front of the balustrade, a boy draws a prophetic picture of Tom hanging from the gallows. Below Tom, another boy ties a bone to a dog's tail. In the lower left, a dog disembowels a cat. In the center foreground another boy kneels on the cobblestones, about to release a cock, as another boy prepares to a stick at it; the boy behind him holds a second cock. On the balustrade one boy holds a torch while his companion blinds a bird with a wire. Further to the left on the balustrade a group of boys laugh at the sight of two cats fight as they are hung by their tails from a gibbet-shaped lamp post. Above them a cat with a pair of wings tied to its back has been tossed out the attic window to see if it could fly
- Description:
- Title engraved above image., State from Paulson., Second state, with price mostly burnished from plate. This state of the plate was first issued in The original works of William Hogarth (London : Sold by John and Josiah Boydell, 1790). It was reissued, with some lines strengthened by the engraver James Heath, in The works of William Hogarth (London : Printed for Baldwin, Cradock, and Joy ..., 1822); another edition was published by Baldwin & Cradock in 1835. See Paulson., First in a series of four: The four stages of cruelty., Quotation engraved below image: "While various scenes of sportive woe, the infant race employ, and tortur'd victims bleeding shew, the tyrant in the boy. Behold! A youth of gentler heart, to spare the creature's pain. O take, he cries - take all my tart, but tears and tart are vain. Learn from this fair example - you whom savage sports delight, how cruelty disgusts the view while pity charms the sight.", and Temporary local Medical Library subject terms: Prevention of cruelty to animals.
- Publisher:
- publisher not identified
- Subject (Topic):
- Animal fighting, Balustrades, Boys, Cats, Cockfighting, Dogs, Gallows, Lampposts, Punishment & torture, and Rake's progress
- Found in:
- Medical Historical Library, Cushing/Whitney Medical Library > First stage of cruelty [graphic]
- Creator:
- Hogarth, William, 1697-1764, printmaker
- Published / Created:
- published according to act of Parliament, Feb. 1, 1751.
- Call Number:
- Kinnaird 53K(a) Box 215
- Collection Title:
- Plate 76. Queen Charlotte's collection of Hogarth works. Leaf 52. Album of William Hogarth prints.
- Image Count:
- 1
- Resource Type:
- still image
- Abstract:
- In a London street, young boys inflict various forms of cruelty upon animals. In the centre, a boy (Tom Nero), identifiable by the badge on his shoulder as a pupil of St. Giles's Parish School, thrusts an arrow into a dog's anus; he ignores the offer of a large tart from a sympathetic young gentleman (said by Paulson to be a compliment to the young George III). To his left on the front of the balustrade, a boy draws a prophetic picture of Tom hanging from the gallows. Below Tom, another boy ties a bone to a dog's tail. In the lower left, a dog disembowels a cat. In the center foreground another boy kneels on the cobblestones, about to release a cock, as another boy prepares to a stick at it; the boy behind him holds a second cock. On the balustrade one boy holds a torch while his companion blinds a bird with a wire. Further to the left on the balustrade a group of boys laugh at the sight of two cats fight as they are hung by their tails from a gibbet-shaped lamp post. Above them a cat with a pair of wings tied to its back has been tossed out the attic window to see if it could fly
- Description:
- Title engraved above image., State, publisher, and series title from Paulson., First in a series of four: The four stages of cruelty., Quotation engraved below image: "While various scenes of sportive woe, the infant race employ, and tortur'd victims bleeding shew, the tyrant in the boy. Behold! A youth of gentler heart, to spare the creature's pain. O take, he cries - take all my tart, but tears and tart are vain. Learn from this fair example - you whom savage sports delight, how cruelty disgusts the view while pity charms the sight.", and Sheet trimmed to 382 x 313 mm.
- Publisher:
- Wm. Hogarth
- Subject (Topic):
- Animal fighting, Balustrades, Boys, Cats, Cockfighting, Dogs, Gallows, Lampposts, Punishment & torture, and Rake's progress
- Found in:
- Lewis Walpole Library > First stage of cruelty [graphic]
- Creator:
- Hogarth, William, 1697-1764, printmaker
- Published / Created:
- [1 April 1745]
- Call Number:
- Sotheby 18++ Box 300
- Collection Title:
- Plate 18. Queen Charlotte's collection of Hogarth works.
- Image Count:
- 1
- Resource Type:
- still image
- Abstract:
- The scene is the interior of a dispensary with the Viscount sitting in a chair, his child-mistress at his knee. The young girl holds a handkerchief to her mouth as if to hide a sore. With his right hand he holds a pill-box out to the doctor; with his left, he threatens him with his raised cane. A large, well-dressed woman looks angrily at the young man and opens a knife, while the quack polishes his glasses, at his side a skull on the table. The room contains numerous medical and scientific objects, including machines for straightening shoulders and for drawing corks, a dried crocodile, a narwhal's tusk, two mummies, a skeleton, and two pictures, one of a two-headed hermaphrodite and the other an anthropophagi (see Paulson). and After the painting "The Inspection" in the National Gallery, London
- Alternative Title:
- Marriage a-la-mode. Plate 3
- Description:
- Title devised by cataloger., Series title engraved below image., and State from Paulson.
- Publisher:
- Wm. Hogarth
- Subject (Topic):
- Children, Crocodiles, Medical equipment & supplies, Nobility, Physicians, Prostitutes, Quacks, Scientific equipment, Sexually transmitted diseases, Skeletons, and Rake's progress
- Found in:
- Lewis Walpole Library > Marriage a-la-mode. [graphic] / Plate III
- Creator:
- Hogarth, William, 1697-1764, printmaker
- Published / Created:
- published according to act of Parliament, Feb. 1, 1751 [that is, between 1790 and 1835]
- Call Number:
- Print20073
- Image Count:
- 1
- Resource Type:
- still image
- Abstract:
- In the street outside the Thavies Inn, Holborn, the coach driver Tom Nero beats the horse that has collapsed under the weight of the overturned coach, having been overloaded with four lawyers who try to scramble out the door. To the right in the foreground, another man beats a sheep to death. Behind him in the mid-distance a sleeping drayman runs over a small boy with his cart loaded with barrels. To the left a driver uses a pitchfork to prod a donkey burdened with two men, a barrel, and a large trunk on its back. In the distance, a crowd of men follow a bull being baited by a dog. On the side of the building on the left, broadsides advertise a cock-fight and a boxing bout between James Field and George Taylor at Broughton's Amphitheatre
- Description:
- Title engraved above image., State from Paulson., Second state, with price mostly burnished from plate. This state of the plate was first issued in The original works of William Hogarth (London : Sold by John and Josiah Boydell, 1790). It was reissued, with some lines strengthened by the engraver James Heath, in The works of William Hogarth (London : Printed for Baldwin, Cradock, and Joy ..., 1822); another edition was published by Baldwin & Cradock in 1835. See Paulson., Second in a series of four: The four stages of cruelty., and Temporary local Medical Library subject terms: Prevention of cruelty to animals.
- Publisher:
- publisher not identified
- Subject (Name):
- Field, James, -1715. and Taylor, George, boxer.
- Subject (Topic):
- Bullfighting, Carts & wagons, Carriages & coaches, Donkeys, Dogs, Rake's progress, Punishment & torture, Signs (Notices), Sheep, Accidents, and Children
- Found in:
- Medical Historical Library, Cushing/Whitney Medical Library > Second stage of cruelty [graphic]
- Creator:
- Hogarth, William, 1697-1764, printmaker
- Published / Created:
- publish'd according to act of Parliament 30 Sep. 1747.
- Call Number:
- Folio 75 H67 800 v.2 (Oversize)
- Collection Title:
- Plate 44. Queen Charlotte's collection of Hogarth works. Leaf 40. Album of William Hogarth prints.
- Image Count:
- 1
- Resource Type:
- still image
- Abstract:
- In the weaver's workshop, Tom Idle sleeps, spindle in hand, at his loom beneath a ballad of Moll Flanders, having drunk from a large tankard lettered "Spittle Fields"; Francis Goodchild concentrates on his work while light streams through the window onto ballads of "The London Prentice" and "Whitington, Ld Mayor" on the wall above his head; a cat pulls at Idle's shuttle and the master, Mr. West, enters shaking his cane at his idle apprentice
- Alternative Title:
- Fellow apprentices at their looms
- Description:
- Title engraved above image., Series title engraved above image; plate numbering below image., State and publisher from Paulson., and On page 131 in volume 2. Sheet trimmed within plate mark: 26.2 x 34.2 cm.
- Publisher:
- Wm. Hogarth
- Subject (Topic):
- Apprentices, Cats, Looms, Rake's progress, Sleeping, Supervisors, Textile industry, and Weaving
- Found in:
- Lewis Walpole Library > The fellow 'prentices at their looms [graphic]
- Creator:
- Hogarth, William, 1697-1764, printmaker
- Published / Created:
- publish'd according to act of Parliament 30 Sep. 1747.
- Call Number:
- Folio 75 H67 800 v.2 (Oversize) Box 1
- Collection Title:
- Plate 44. Queen Charlotte's collection of Hogarth works. Leaf 40. Album of William Hogarth prints.
- Image Count:
- 1
- Resource Type:
- still image
- Abstract:
- In the weaver's workshop, Tom Idle sleeps, spindle in hand, at his loom beneath a ballad of Moll Flanders, having drunk from a large tankard lettered "Spittle Fields"; Francis Goodchild concentrates on his work while light streams through the window onto ballads of "The London Prentice" and "Whitington, Ld Mayor" on the wall above his head; a cat pulls at Idle's shuttle and the master, Mr. West, enters shaking his cane at his idle apprentice
- Alternative Title:
- Fellow apprentices at their looms
- Description:
- Title engraved above image., Series title engraved above image; plate numbering below image., State and publisher from Paulson., Sheet trimmed within plate mark: 26.4 x 34.5 cm., and Fomerly on page 131 in volume 2. Removed in 2013 by LWL conservator.
- Publisher:
- Wm. Hogarth
- Subject (Topic):
- Apprentices, Cats, Looms, Rake's progress, Sleeping, Supervisors, Textile industry, and Weaving
- Found in:
- Lewis Walpole Library > The fellow 'prentices at their looms [graphic]
- Creator:
- Hogarth, William, 1697-1764, printmaker
- Published / Created:
- publish'd according to act of Parliament 30 Sep. 1747.
- Call Number:
- Sotheby 44 Box 100
- Collection Title:
- Plate 44. Queen Charlotte's collection of Hogarth works. Leaf 40. Album of William Hogarth prints.
- Image Count:
- 1
- Resource Type:
- still image
- Abstract:
- In the weaver's workshop, Tom Idle sleeps, spindle in hand, at his loom beneath a ballad of Moll Flanders, having drunk from a large tankard lettered "Spittle Fields"; Francis Goodchild concentrates on his work while light streams through the window onto ballads of "The London Prentice" and "Whitington, Ld Mayor" on the wall above his head; a cat pulls at Idle's shuttle and the master, Mr. West, enters shaking his cane at his idle apprentice
- Alternative Title:
- Fellow apprentices at their looms
- Description:
- Title engraved above image., Series title engraved above image; plate numbering below image., State and publisher from Paulson., and 1 print : engraving on laid paper ; plate mark 26.2 x 34.4 cm, on sheet 29.4 x 38 cm.
- Publisher:
- Wm. Hogarth
- Subject (Topic):
- Apprentices, Cats, Looms, Rake's progress, Sleeping, Supervisors, Textile industry, and Weaving
- Found in:
- Lewis Walpole Library > The fellow 'prentices at their looms [graphic]