1721.
1. An Emblematic Print on the South Sea; W. Hogarth, inv. et sc. Sold by Mrs. Chilcot in Westminster Hall, and B. Caldwell, printseller, in Newgate Street. Second state—Printed for Bowles. Third state—Without any publisher's name. Some wretched stanzas are engraved beneath the print.
2. The Lottery; W. Hogarth, inv. et sculp. Sold by Chilcot and Caldwell, price 1s. Second state—Printed for Chilcot. Third state—For Sympson. And in a fourth—For Bowles—"price 1s." is erased. An explanation with references is engraved beneath.
The allegory of both these prints is obscure, but the figures are in the manner of Callot, and in a spirited and masterly style.
1723.
Eighteen plates to Aubry de la Mottraye's Travels. Hogarth's name on fourteen of them. As these prints have such references as are hardly intelligible, and as Mr. Nichols' numbers and mine do not exactly agree, I have given a slight hint of the subject of each.
5. Vas mirabile ex integro Smaragdo, Genoæ, etc.
Tom. i. No. 9.—Tiara Patriarchalis Græca.
Tom. i. No. 10.—A Lady and Black in a Bath. No name legible.
Tom. i. No. 11.—Dance of Elegant Female Figures. [Vide p. 125.]