<oai_dc:dc xmlns:oai_dc="http://www.openarchives.org/OAI/2.0/oai_dc/" xmlns:dc="http://purl.org/dc/elements/1.1/" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://www.openarchives.org/OAI/2.0/oai_dc/ http://www.openarchives.org/OAI/2.0/oai_dc.xsd"><dc:title>Consequences of a successfull Frenh [sic] invasion. Me teach de English republicans to work. Scene, a ploughed field / [graphic] : No. III, plate 2d</dc:title><dc:creator>Gillray, James, 1756-1815, printmaker</dc:creator><dc:date>[1 March 1798]</dc:date><dc:language>eng</dc:language><dc:description>"Beneath the title is etched on a separate plate: 'Description - A Row of English People in Tatters, and wooden Shoes, hoeing a Field of Garlic. A tall raw-boned Frenchman, with a long Queue behind, like a Negro Driver with a long Waggoner's Whip in each Hand, walking by their side. The People very sulky, but tolerably obedient &amp; tractable for so short a Time ; John Bull being a bad Lad only when you are very good to him. The Group of the hoers are, a Husbandman, his Wife, a Manufacturer, a Curate, &amp; an Old man; - in another Part of the Field [middle distance, left], four other English people, a Father &amp; Son (Husbandmen) with two Seamen, in a Yoke, drawing a Plough ; a French Farmer guiding it with one Hand, &amp; with the other flourishing &amp; cracking a French Postillion's long Whip ; a French Boy walking by the side of the Yoke with a Goad, which has a Point as sharp as a Needle, the French Hoe-driver gives his Instructions thus: "Jacques Roast-Beef, hoe straight, deep, quick &amp; rest not." - The Instructions of the French Holder of the Plough are - "Monsieur John Bull mon Ami", (in English) My Friend, Mr John Bull, pull hard, plough deep, trot quick, turn sudden, &amp; rest not," - A Messager d'Etat, (in English) a Messenger of State in his Habit of Office, with a Letter in his Hand, comes to hurry on the work for the Exigencies of War. - In another part of the Plate [left] stand the Farm Offices ; a vast oak, withered, above them, - A Caldron boiling, on which is engraved, Soup Maigre, with a stack of Onions &amp; Turnips close by it. On a large Board is painted - "Regulations of this Farm., - ["At Five o'clock in the Morning the Hogs &amp; English Slaves are \ "to be fed; at Twelve O'Clock at Night they are to be suppered, \ "&amp; littered up with the best Straw that the Scotch &amp; Irish part \ "of the Slaves can steal from the neighbouring Farms, &amp; then \ "locked up. But there are Holes in the Bottom of the Walls \ "for the Hogs to go out, &amp; get the Benefit of Fresh Air. - \ "Punishment of Laziness, for the first Offence, five hundred \ "Lashes; for the second, the Guillotine. All other Crimes, ex \ "-cept those which affect Frenchmen, are forgiven on Promise \ "of Amendment." - A Ballad is lying on the Ground in the English Language, entitled, "Recantation of British \ &amp; Irish Republican Husbandmen &amp; Manufacturers. - The Burden of the Song is - "Oh, England, England! \ "King, Wife, Sons &amp; Daughters of our King, of \ "whom the Sons are all brave, &amp; the Daughters \ "all beautiful: Parliament &amp; Judges, who covered \ "us with Blessings, which are repaid with Reproaches. \ "Clergy who taught us to die as well as to live for \ "our country - Landaff, Landaff. - Nobles &amp; \ "Squires in whose Hospitality &amp; Bounty we shared. - \ "St Vincents &amp; Duncans. Merchants, Master Manufacturer[s] \ "who lived as simply as ourselves, but both of us well; "how could we forget you? You would not have de- \ "serted us; but we deserted you. - But with the same \ "Weapons which should have defended you, we will \ "punish ourselves. We despise Life, we could submit to \ "Misfortune, but cannot bear the Consciousness of \ "not having stood or fallen with you. Oh England, \ "England, Country of every Bliss, for ever farewell!' [Dalrymple, op. cit., pp. 5-6, 33-5.]  The hoe-driver stands on the left of the line of hoers (right), who advance diagonally. The husbandman is a fat John Bull, his wife a comely woman. Beyond the 'old man' is a fifth man on the extreme right Gillray has added in the foreground a ragged hoer suspiciously like Fox, cf. BMSat 9180, &amp;c. The four men yoked to the plough do not resemble seamen. The print otherwise follows the description; the 'Messager d'État' is dressed exactly as in BMSat 9213. All the Englishmen wear large wooden shoes, emblems of servitude."--British Museum online catalogue</dc:description><dc:description>Title from text etched above and below image.</dc:description><dc:description>Publisher's name and publication date in imprint are scored through with lightly etched lines.</dc:description><dc:description>"Price 6 d. Colourd. 1 sh. 3 d."</dc:description><dc:description>Smaller plate consists entirely of etched text and is printed below title of plate with image.</dc:description><dc:description>Three columns of text on lower plate begins: Description. A row of English people in tatters and wooden shoes, hoeing a field of garlic ...</dc:description><dc:description>Sheet trimmed to plate mark on upper edge.</dc:description><dc:description>Temporary local subject terms: Allusion to Duncan, Adam, viscount, 1731-1804 -- Allusion to St. Vincent, John Jervis, 1st earl, 1734-1823 -- Allusion to Watson, Richard, 1737-1816 -- Farming equipment: Plough -- Hoes -- French costume: Hoe driver -- French uniforms: Messenger of State -- Threat of French invasion -- Songs: 'Oh, England, England!' -- Literature: Allusion to Address to the people of Great Britain, by Richard Watson -- Frenchmen -- Farms -- Soup maigre -- Goads -- Caldrons -- Navy: Sailors -- French hoe drivers -- John Bull -- Wooden shoes -- Propaganda -- Husbandmen -- Clergy: Curate -- Hoers -- Whips: Postilion -- Food: Garlic -- Turnips.</dc:description><dc:description>With: Gillray, J. Me teach de English republicans to work: scene, a ploughed field. London: Pubd. March 1st, 1798, by Js. Gillray, 27 St. James's Street, [1 March 1798].</dc:description><dc:description>2 prints on 1 sheet : etching with engraving on wove paper, hand-colored ; plate mark 30.6 x 39.7 cm and plate mark 10.7 and 39.9 cm, on sheet 43.0 x 42.5 cm.</dc:description><dc:description>Price has been completely erased from sheet.</dc:description><dc:description>On the verso is an impression in red ink of an earlier state of the same print.</dc:description><dc:description>Mounted on leaf 37 of volume 4 of 12.</dc:description></oai_dc:dc>