V. 3. Caricature magazine, or, Hudibrastic mirror.
Image Count:
1
Resource Type:
still image
Alternative Title:
Countryman and the Quakers
Description:
Title etched below image., Later state; former plate number "No. 17" has been replaced with a new plate number, and first half of imprint statement has been burnished from plate., Date of publication based on complete imprint on earlier state: Pubd. April 22d, 1807, by T. Tegg, No. 111 Cheapside. Cf. Lewis Walpole Library call no.: 807.04.22.02.1+., Plate numbered "153" in upper right corner., Plate from: Woodward, G.M. Caricature magazine, or Hudibrastic mirror. London : Thomas Tegg, [1808?], v. 3., Also issued separately., Not in the Catalogue of prints and drawings in the British Museum. Division I, political and personal satires., and Watermark: HSM [trimmed] 1818.
Title from caption below image., Two columns of verse above image: I've been drinking, I've been drinking where the Purl ws rather cheap and I'm thinking & I'm thinking that I've drunk somewhat too deep ..., Not in the Catalogue of prints and drawings in the British Museum. Division I, political and personal satires., and Watermark: 1818.
A vendor shown full-length before his basket on a stand. He wears an apron under a military-like jacket as he calls out
Description:
Title from caption below image., Date of publication based on watermark., Not in the Catalogue of prints and drawings in the British Museum. Division I, political and personal satires., Watermark: 1818., and Ms. annotations in pencil.
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.