The boxes O woe is me t'have seen what I have seen seeing what I see. Shakespear [sic] / [graphic]
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Lewis Walpole Library > The boxes O woe is me t'have seen what I have seen seeing what I see. Shakespear [sic] / [graphic]
Description
- Title
- The boxes O woe is me t'have seen what I have seen seeing what I see. Shakespear [sic] / [graphic]
- Creator
- Rowlandson, Thomas, 1756-1827, printmaker
- Contributor
- Rowlandson, Thomas, 1756-1827, publisher.
- Published / Created
- [12 December 1809]
- Publication Place
- London
- Publisher
- Pud. Decr. 12, 1809 by T. Rowlandson, No. 1 James St. Adelphi
- Abstract
-
"A view of a narrow section of the auditorium of Covent Garden theatre, with the 'pigeon-holes' along the upper margin, and the heads and shoulders of persons in the pit forming a base to the design. The audience is proletarian. In two pigeon-holes are a few elderly persons trying to hear or see, in another sit birds resembling owls or spectacled old men, with broad collars inscribed 7/s (reversed). From the fourth box a bird with a similar collar is flying. The two-shilling gallery below is absurdly low and constricted. One man vomits from it on to the head of a sub-human creature in the box beneath. In the third tier (the hated 'Private Boxes') couples kiss or drink together; there are two fat liveried servants. Occupants of the two lower tiers are rowdily ill-mannered. Two men and two women in the pit are engaged in a scuffle; other men are dour and ill-tempered, except one, who prods with his umbrella the posterior of a young woman in a box. There are various decorative emblems on the spaces between the boxes: A cupid and a large key (see No. 11421), bull's horns enclosed in a wreath, a cock and a hare, a satyr fighting with women, and, above the lowest tier, a fat man dragging an unwilling ass, inscribed 'From N to O [New Prices to Old] Jack [Kemble] you must Go'."--British Museum online catalogue
- Description
-
Title from caption below image.
Artist's attribution 'Opie' is a pseudonym used by Thomas Rowlandson. See British Museum catalogue.
Artist's attribution inscribed as mirror image on print.
Temporary local subject terms: Theatres: Covent Garden -- Male costume, 1809 -- Female costume, 1809 -- Umbrellas.
Print numbered '177' in ms. near upper edge of sheet. - Provenance
- Seven Gables ; September, 1968 ; Sotheby's Lot 238 [Car. II] to Seven Gables ; July 2, 1968.
- Extent
- 1 print : plate mark 33 x 20.7 cm, on sheet 36 x 24 cm
- Language
-
English
Collection Information
- Repository
- Lewis Walpole Library
- Call Number
- 809.12.12.01
Subjects, Formats, And Genres
- Genre
-
Satires (Visual works) England 1809
Etchings England London 1809 - Material
- etching ; and wove paper hand-colored.
- Resource Type
- still image
- Subject (Topic)
- Old Price Riots, London, England, 1809
- Subjects
-
Old Price Riots, London, England, 1809
England > 1809
England > London > 1809
Access And Usage Rights
- Access
- Public
- Rights
- The use of this image may be subject to the copyright law of the United States (Title 17, United States Code) or to site license or other rights management terms and conditions. The person using the image is liable for any infringement.
Identifiers
- Orbis Record
- 9165725
- Object ID (OID)
- 10964621