CONTENTS
OF
THE SECOND VOLUME.
| (1800–1825.) | |
|---|---|
| 1800. | |
| PAGE | |
| 'Le Brun Travestied, or Caricatures of the Passions'—[Dr. Botherum the Mountebank]—Humbugging—Hocus-pocus,or Searching for the Philosopher's Stone—Hogarthian Novelist—Britannia'sProtection, or Loyalty Triumphant—A Silly—A Sulky—Beef à la Mode—Collar'd Pork—ThePleasures of Margate—[Summer Amusements, or a Game at Bowls]—Cockney Outings—Beautiesof Sterne: 'The Sentimental Journey'—Series of 'Attributes'—'Country Characters'—'MatrimonialComforts'—[Preparations for the Academy; Old Nollekens and his Venus]—'Remarks ona Tour to North and South Wales in the year 1797' | [1] |
| 1801. | |
| A Money Scrivener—[A Counsellor]—The Union—[A Jew Broker]—[The Brilliants]—Undertakers Regaling—[Symptomsof Sanctity]—Single Combat in Moorfields, or Magnanimous Paul O!Challenging All O!—The Emperor Paul of Russia, a Mad Autocrat—Series of 'Prayers' and'Journals'—The Union Head-dress—An Old Member on his Way to the House of Commons—Minorworks—Subjects after the designs of G. M. Woodward | [22] |
| 1802. | |
| Series of 'Journals'—Special Pleaders—La Fille mal Gardé, or Jack in the Box—[A Lady in Limbo,or Jew Bail Rejected]—[Slyboots]—A Snip in a Rage—[The Corporal in Good Quarters]—Sorrow'sDry, or a Cure for the Heart-ache—Hunt the Slipper; Picnic Revels—Who's Mistress Now?—'CompendiousTreatise on Modern Education'—'Bardic Museum' | [35] |
| 1803. | |
| A Catamaran—Billiards—A Diver—John Bull Listening to the Quarrels of State Affairs—Flags ofTruth and Lies—Minor subjects | [42] |
| 1804. | |
| [A French Ordinary]—Volunteering—The Imperial Coronation—Theatrical Leapfrog—Melpomene inthe Dumps—Death of Madame République—A New French Phantasmagoria—The Eight Stagesof Man's Schooling—Letter from the Caricaturist to Heath, the engraver | [44] |
| 1805. | |
| Quarterly Duns, or Clamorous Tax-gatherers—The famous Coalheaver, Black Charley—The ModernHercules Cleansing the Augean Stable—A Scotch Sarcophagus—John Bull's Turnpike Gate—TheScotch Ostrich Seeking Cover—Recovery of a Dormant Title—Antiquarians à la Grecque—JohnBull at the Italian Opera—Napoleon Buonaparte in a Fever on Receiving the ExtraordinaryGazette of Nelson's Victory over the Combined Fleets—[A Boarding School]—Illustrations toFielding's 'Tom Jones'—Illustrations to Smollett's 'Peregrine Pickle'—Views in Cornwall,Devon, Dorset, &c. | [49] |
| 1806. | |
| 'The Sorrows of Werter'—A Cake in Danger—Falstaff and his Followers Vindicating the PropertyTax—A Maiden Aunt Smelling Fire—Recruiting on a Broad-Bottom'd Principle—Daniel Lambert,the Wonderful Great Pumpkin of Little Britain—A Diving Machine on a New Construction—TheAcquittal—Experiments at Dover, or Master Charley's Magic Lantern—[Butterfly-Hunting]—Anythingwill do for an Officer—Interior of St. Brewer's Church—[A Prize Fight] | [57] |
| 1807. | |
| [Miseries of London: A Street Blockade]—The Captain's Account-current of Charge and Discharge—AtHome and Abroad—Abroad and at Home—Mrs. Showell and Gen. Guise's Collection ofPictures at Oxford—[The Enraged Vicar]—[All the Talents]—A Henpeck'd Husband—JohnRosedale, Mariner, Exhibitor at the Hall of Greenwich Hospital—The Pilgrims and the Peas—SongHeadings—[Monastic Fare]—[The Holy Friar]—'I Smell a Rat,' or a Rogue in Grain—TheOld Man of the Sea and Sindbad the Sailor—A White Sergeant giving the Word of Command—MiseriesPersonal—More Scotchmen, or Johnny Maccree Opening his New Budget—[A View onthe Banks of the Thames]—The Double Disaster, or the New Cure for Love—Miseries of theCountry—A Mistake at Newmarket, or Sport and Piety—[Englishman at Paris]—Symptoms ofRestiveness—[A Calf's Pluck]—[Rusty Bacon]—A Tour to the Lakes—Thomas Simmons, theMurderer—Directions to Footmen—John Bull Making Observations on the Coast—The Dog andthe Devil—More Miseries—Illustrations to 'The Pleasures of Human Life' | [64] |
| 1808. | |
| Scenes at Brighton—[Miseries of High Life]—The Green Dragon—Soldiers on a March—The Consultation,or Last Hope—Volunteer Wit—The Anatomy of Melancholy—[The Mother's Hope]—TheSweet Little Girl that I Love—Odd Fellows from Downing Street Complaining to John Bull—[ASnug Cabin, or Port Admiral]—Accommodation—The Welsh Sailor's Mistake—WonderfullyMended—Breaking Cover—Get Money—[Doctor Gallipot Placing his Fortune at the Feet of hisMistress]—Rum Characters in a Shrubbery—Rowlandson's Caricatures against Buonaparte:The Corsican Tiger; Billingsgate at Bayonne; The Corsican Spider in his Web; TheCorsican Nurse Soothing the Infants of Spain; The Beast as Described in Revelations; Fromthe Desk to the Throne; King Joe's Retreat from Madrid; King Joe on his Spanish Donkey; ASpanish Passport to France; The Political Butcher; The Fox and the Grapes; Prophecy Explained;Napoleon the Little in a Rage with his Great French Eagle; A Hard Passage, orBoney Playing Base on the Continent; King Joe and Co. making the most of their time previousto quitting Madrid; Nap and his Partner Joe; Nap and his Friends in their Glory; John Bullarming the Spaniards; Junot disgorging his Booty; The Progress of the Emperor Napoleon—Illustrationsto 'An Academy for Grown Horsemen' and 'Annals of Horsemanship,' communicatedby Geoffrey Gambado, Esq.—'The Caricature Magazine, or Hudibrastic Mirror'—'ChesterfieldTravestie, or School for Modern Manners'—[Behaviour at Table]—'A Lecture on Heads,' byG. A. Stevens—Plates to 'The Miseries of Human Life'—'The Microcosm of London, or Londonin Miniature'—'An Essay on the Art of Ingeniously Tormenting' | [84] |
| 1809. | |
| The Head of the Family in Good Humour—The Old Woman's Complaint, or the Greek Alphabet—Launchinga Frigate—[A Mad Dog in a Coffee House]—Disappointed Epicures—[A Mad Dog in aDining Room]—The Comforts of Matrimony—The Miseries of Wedlock—['Oh! you're a Devil.Get along, do!'] Rowlandson's Caricatures upon the Delicate Investigation, or theClarke Scandal: Particulars of the Case; The Parliamentary Examination; The PrincipalPersonages Concerned; Mrs. Clarke's Memoirs; 'The Rival Princes'; 'Tegg's Complete Collectionof Caricatures relative to Mrs. Clarke, and the Circumstances arising from the Investigationof the Conduct of His Royal Highness the Duke of York before the House of Commons,1809'; Dissolution of Parliament, or the Industrious Mrs. Clarke Winding up her Accounts;Mrs. Clarke's Levee; Days of Prosperity in Gloucester Place; All for Love: a Scene at Weymouth;An Unexpected Meeting; The Bishop and his Clarke; A Pilgrimage from Surrey toGloucester Place; The York Magician; A Parliamentary Toast; Chelsea Parade; The Road toPreferment; [The York March;] The Triumvirate of Gloucester Place; A Scene from theTragedy of 'Cato'; Yorkshire Hieroglyphics, pl. 182; The Burning Shame; The Statue to be Disposedof; A General Discharge; The Champion of Oakhampton; The Parson and the Clarke;Samson Asleep on the Lap of Delilah; The Resignation; The Prodigal Son; Mrs. Clarke's LastEffort; The York Dilly; Doctor O'Meara's Return to his Family; Mrs. Clarke's Farewell to herAudience; Original Plan for a Popular Monument to be Erected in Gloucester Place; A YorkAddress to the Whale; The Flower of the City; The Modern Babel; The Sick Lion and theAsses; Burning the Books; A Piece-Offering; The Quaker and the Clarke; John Bull and theGenius of Corruption—Boney's Broken Bridge—Hell Broke Loose—The Tables are Turned—Moreof the Clarke—The Plot Thickens—Amusement for the Recess—The Bill of Wright's—Wonders,Wonders, Wonders!—The Rising Sun, or a View of the Continent—The Pope's Excommunicationof Buonaparte—The Walcheren Expedition—Song by Commodore Curtis—ADesign for a Monument to be Erected in Commemoration of the Glorious and Never-to-be-forgottenGrand Expedition, so ably planned and executed in the year 1809—General Cheathem'sMarvellous Return from his Exhibition of Fireworks—Plan for a General Reform—This is theHouse that Jack Built—A Lump of Impertinence—A Lump of Innocence—Preparations for theJubilee, or Theatricals Extraordinary—A Bill of Fare for Bond Street Epicures—The Boxes—APeep at the Gas Lights in Pall Mall—Joint Stock Street—The 'Bull and Mouth'—A Glee—Rowlandson's'Sketches from Nature'—Sterne's 'Sentimental Journey'—Butler's 'Hudibras'—'SurprisingAdventures of the Renowned Baron Munchausen'—'The Beauties of Sterne'—'PoeticalMagazine'—'The Schoolmaster's Tour' (Dr. Syntax)—[The Mansion House Monitor]—'Annals ofSporting,' by Calib Quizzem—'Trial of the Duke of York'—'Advice to Sportsmen' from the notes ofMarmaduke Markwell—'The Pleasures of Human Life,' by Hilari Benevolus & Co.—Illustrations toSmollett's Miscellaneous Works—'Beauties of Tom Brown'—Views in Cornwall, &c.—'Scandal;Investigation of the Charges brought against H.R.H. the Duke of York, by G. L. Wardle, Esq.,M.P. for Devon, with the evidence and remarks of the Members' | [130] |
| 1810. | |
| Winding up the Medical Report of the Walcheren Expedition—Libel-Hunters on the Look-out, or DailyExaminers of the Liberty of the Press—[A New Tap Wanted]—The Boroughmongers Strangled inthe Tower—Views of the Colleges of Oxford and Cambridge—A Bait for Kiddies on the NorthRoad—[Kissing for Love]—Easterly Winds—Three Weeks after Marriage, or the Great LittleEmperor Playing at Bo-peep—A Bonnet Shop—Peter Plumb's Diary—A Table d'Hôte, or FrenchOrdinary in Paris—Paris Diligence—Boxing Match between Dutch Sam and Medley—SmugglingOut, or Starting for Gretna Green—Smuggling In, or a College Trick—Procession of the CodCompany from St. Giles's to Billingsgate—Rigging out a Smuggler—Dramatic Demireps at theirMorning Rehearsal—Sports of a Country Fair—[Spitfires]—An Old Ewe Dressed Lamb Fashion—DropsyCourting Consumption—Kitchen Stuff—[A Hit at Backgammon]—Medical Despatch—BathRaces—[Doctor Drainbarrel]—After Sweet Meat comes Sour Sauce—The Harmonic Society—Signof the Four Alls—Signs—The Rabbit Merchant—A Sale of English Beauties in the EastIndies—A Parody on Milton—Cries of London | [182] |
| 1811. | |
| College Pranks—A Sleepy Congregation—The Gig Shop—[Pigeon-Hole]—A French Dentist—Bacon-facedFellows of Brazenose Broke Loose—She Stoops to Conquer—The Anatomist—Sailors onHorseback—Pastime in Portugal—The Last Drop—Boney the Second, or the Little BaboonCreated to Devour French Monkeys—A Picture of Misery—Puss in Boots, or General Junot takenby Surprise—Nursing the Spawn of a Tyrant—The Enraged Son of Mars and the Timid Tonsor—RuralSports: A Cat in a Bowl—[A Dog Fight]—Touch for Touch—The Bassoon, with a FrenchHorn Accompaniment—Easter Monday—[Rural Sports]—[The Huntsman Rising]—[The GamesterGoing to Bed]—Love Laughs at Locksmiths—[Masquerading]—Accommodation Ladder—Lookingat the Comet—Life and Death of the Racehorse—A Milling Match between Cribb and Molineaux—[Smock-Racing]—AGame at Quoits—How to Show off a well-shaped Leg—Twelfth Night Characters—CricketMatch Extraordinary—Minor Subjects—Six Classes of the Horse—Distillers—DinnersDressed in the Neatest Manner—A Trip to Gretna Green—Balloon-Hunting—A BelvoirLeap—A Man of Feeling—Bel and the Dragon—A Milk-sop—Royal Academy, Somerset House—Travellingin France—[Exhibition Starecase], Somerset House—[The Manager's Last Kick]—[Preparingto Start]—Awkward Squads Studying the Graces—Hiring a Servant—Anglers of 1811—[Preparingfor the Race]—Patience in a Punt—A Templar at His Studies—A Barber's Shop—ModernAntiques—'Munchausen at Walcheren'—'Chesterfield Burlesqued' | [199] |
| 1812. | |
| Duke of Cumberland—Lord Petersham—Lord Pomfret—Wet under Foot—Plucking a Spooney—Catchingan Elephant—Description of a Boxing Match between Ward and Quirk—A SpanishCloak—Fast Day—Sea Stores—Land Stores—The Chamber of Genius—[Italian Picture-DealersHumbugging my Lord Anglaise]—The Dog Days—[A Brace of Blackguards]—[Racing]—BroadGrins—Watermen—A Seaman's Wife's Reckoning—Setting out for Margate—Refinement ofLanguage—Bitter Fare—[Raising the Wind]—Christmas Gambols—The Successful Fortune-Hunter—HackneyAssembly—The Learned Scotchman—Preaching to some Purpose—A Visit tothe Doctor—Puff Paste—Mock Turtle—Off She Goes—A Cat in Pattens—'Petticoat Loose; aFragmentary Tale of the Castle'—Series of 'Views in Cornwall'—'Tour of Doctor Syntax,in Search of the Picturesque'—'Second Tour of Doctor Syntax, in Search of Consolation'—'ThirdTour of Doctor Syntax, in Search of a Wife' | [225] |
| 1813. | |
| [Bachelor's Fare, or Bread and Cheese and Kisses]—The Last Gasp, or Toadstools Mistaken for Mushrooms—SummerAmusements at Margate—Humours of Houndsditch—[Unloading a Waggon]—Nonebut the Brave Deserve the Fair—A Doleful Disaster, or Miss Tubby Tatarmin's WigCaught Fire—The Norwich Bull Feast—[A Long Pull, a Strong Pull, and a Pull all together]—TheCorsican Toad under a Harrow—The Execution of two celebrated Enemies of Old England, andtheir Dying Speeches, November 5, 1813—A Dutch Nightmare—Plump to the Devil we boldlyKicked both Nap and his Partner Joe—The Corsican Munchausen—Funking the Corsican—TheMock Phœnix—Friends and Foes, up he Goes!—Political Chemists and German Retorts—Napoléonle Grand—Mock Auction, or Boney Selling Stolen Goods—How to Vault into theSaddle—Witches in a Hayloft—The Quakers and the Commissioners of Excise—[Doctor Syntaxin the Middle of a Political Squabble]—A-going! A-going!—Giving up the Ghost—Ghost of myDeparted Husband—'Letters from Italy,' by Lewis Engelbach—'Poetical Sketches of Scarborough,'illustrated by Rowlandson from designs by J. Green—'Dr. Syntax's Tour,' republished | [253] |
| 1814. | |
| The Double Humbug—Death and Buonaparte—Transparency exhibited at Ackermann's on thevictory of Leipzig—[Madame Véry], Restaurateur, Palais Royal, Paris—[La Belle Limonadière] auCafé des Milles Colonnes—Quarter Day, or Clearing the Premises—Kicking up a Breeze, orBarrow-women Basting a Beadle—[The Progress of Gallantry]—[A Tailor's Wedding]—HeadRunner of Runaways from Leipzig Fair—[Crimping a Quaker]—The Devil's Darling—Blucher theBrave Extorting the Groan of Abdication from the Corsican Bloodhound—Coming in at the Deathof the Corsican Fox—Bloody Boney, the Carcase Butcher, left off Trade and Retiring to ScarecrowIsland—The Rogue's March—The Affectionate Farewell, or Kick for Kick—A DelicateFinish to a French Usurper—Nap Dreading his Doleful Doom, or his Grand Entry into the Isle ofElba—The Tyrant of the Continent is Fallen; Europe is Free; England Rejoices—Boney TurnedMoralist—What I was! what I am! what I ought to be!—[Peace and Plenty]—Macassar Oil—APleasant Way of Making Hay—[Portsmouth Point]—The Four Seasons of Love—JoannaSouthcott, the Prophetess—Buck-Hunting | [271] |
| 1815. | |
| Female Politicians—Breaking up the Blue Stocking Club—Defrauding the Customs—Hodge's Explanationof a Hundred Magistrates—Tailors Drinking the Tunbridge Waters—Flight of Buonapartefrom Hell Bay—Hell Hounds Rallying round the Idol of France—Vive le Roi! Vive l'Empereur!Vive le Diable!—Scene in a New Pantomime to be Performed at the Theatre Royal, Paris—TheCorsican and his Blood Hounds at the Window of the Tuileries—Ackermann's Transparency onthe Victory of Waterloo—Boney's Trial, Sentence, and Dying Speech, or Europe's InjuriesAvenged—Ackermann's Transparency on the General Peace, Nov. 27, 1815—The Cockney Hunt—MeasuringSubstitutes for the Army of Reserve—A Journeyman Tailor—[An Eating House]—Neighbours—Banditti—Virtuein Danger—Slap Bang Shop—Accidents will Happen—Sympathy—Despatch,or Jack Preparing for Sea—Deadly-Lively—Illustrations to 'The Military Adventuresof Johnny Newcome'—Illustrations to 'The Grand Master, or Adventures of Qui Hi inHindostan'—[Hindoo Incantations]—Illustrations to 'Naples and the Campagna Felice,' in a seriesof letters by Lewis Engelbach—[The Letter-Writer]—Don Lugi's Ball | [289] |
| 1816. | |
| Exhibition at Bullock's Museum of Buonaparte's Carriage taken at Waterloo—The Attempt to Washthe Blackamoor White—[Lady Hamilton]—'Relics of a Saint,' by Ferdinand Farquhar—Rowlandson's'World in Miniature'—Illustrations to 'The English Dance of Death' | [309] |
| 1817. | |
| Illustrations to Goldsmith's ['Vicar of Wakefield']—Illustrations to 'The Dance of Life'—'GrotesqueDrawing Book,' &c. | [356] |
| 1818. | |
| Wild Irish, or Paddy from Cork, with his Coat Buttoned Behind—Doncaster Fair, or the IndustriousYorkshire Bites—Illustrations to 'The Adventures of Johnny Newcome in the Navy' | [363] |
| 1819. | |
| A Rough Sketch of the Times, as delineated by Sir Francis Burdett—'Who Killed Cock Robin?' (chap-bookon the Manchester Massacre)—Female Intrepidity (chap-book) | [365] |
| 1820. | |
| Chemical Lectures (Sir Humphrey Davy)—Rowlandson's 'Characteristic Sketches of the LowerClasses'—'The Second Tour of Doctor Syntax' | [366] |
| 1821. | |
| A Smoky House and a Scolding Wife—Tricks of the Turf, or Settling how to Lose a Race—Illustrationsto 'Journal of Sentimental Travels in the Southern Provinces of France'—'Le Don QuichotteRomantique, ou voyage du Docteur Syntaxe' | [368] |
| 1822. | |
| Illustrations to 'The History of Johnny Quæ Genus'—Rowlandson's 'Sketches from Nature'—'ThirdTour of Doctor Syntax, in Search of a Wife'—'Die Reise des Doktor Syntax'—Crimes of theClergy | [371] |
| 1823. | |
| Not at Home, or the Disappointed Dinner-hunter—An Old Poacher Caught in a Snare—The Chance-sellerof the Exchequer putting an Extinguisher on Lotteries—Westmacott's 'Spirit of the PublicJournals for 1823'—[The Toothache, or Torment and Torture] | [374] |
| 1825. | |
| 'Bernard Blackmantle' (C. M. Westmacott), 'Spirit of the Public Journals for the year 1824'—'TheEnglish Spy,' by Bernard Blackmantle | [377] |
| 1831. | |
| Posthumous Publication—'The Humourist, a Companion for the Christmas Fireside,' by W. H.Harrison, 'with fifty engravings and numerous vignettes from designs by the late ThomasRowlandson' | [380] |
SUMMARIES. | |
| Chronological summary of subjects, social and political, published caricatures, plates, and book illustrations,engraved by or after Thomas Rowlandson, 1774 to 1831 | [387] |
| Addendum to the chronological summary of Rowlandson'spublished caricatures | [406] |
APPENDIX. | |
| Additional Sources of Reference upon Rowlandson's Caricatures: | |
| Catalogue of pictorial satires in the Print Department of the British Museum, from the notes ofEdward Hawkins, prepared by Frederic George Stephens | [411] |
| 'Centuria Librorum Absconditorum (Pisanus Fraxi)' | [412] |
| Original drawings by Thomas Rowlandson in the Department of Prints and Drawings, BritishMuseum | [412] |
| In the Royal Collection, Windsor Castle | [413] |
| In the collection of water-colour drawings of the English school, Science and Art Department,South Kensington Museum | [413] |
| Dyce collection of water-colour drawings of the English school, Science and Art Department,South Kensington Museum | [413] |
| Private collections of original drawings by Thomas Rowlandson | [415] |
INDICES. | |
| Index of names, persons, &c. | [435] |
| Index of titles, subjects, published caricatures, illustrations, &c. | [440] |
ROWLANDSON THE CARICATURIST.
1800.
January 1, 1800. [A French Ordinary.] Published by S. W. Fores. (See [January 2, 1804].)
January 20–3, 1800. Washing Trotters. Published by Hixon, 355 Exeter Change, Strand.—As the title indicates, an etching of a curious couple engaged in the domestic operation of tubbing.
January 20, 1800. Desire, No. 1. Woodward del., Rowlandson sculp. Published by R. Ackermann.—'Various are the ways this passion might be depicted: in this delineation the subjects chosen are simple—a hungry boy and a plum-pudding.'