In an open landscape, Columbine reposes on the ground, her arms and head supported on a large rock, her left arm thrown over her head. Scaramouche is kneeling behind her, grabbing with one hand the folds of her skirt as if to lift it. In the background on the left is a large tomb or a ruin
Description:
Title devised by cataloger from captions below image., Sheet trimmed within plate mark., One of a series of prints with the Commedia dell'arte characters., Eight lines of verse in two columns (four lines under each name): Columbine. How came I overtaken so? ... Scaramouch. Drunk and asleep fie Columbine ..., Not in the Catalogue of prints and drawings in the British Museum. Division I, political and personal satires., and Mounted to 18 x 17 cm, window mounted to 23 x 19 cm.
A man sits at a table in his library leaning his head on his hand as he contemplates the sheets of paper before him. An owl sits on the table with a ink well suspended from his mouth and a quill resting in the well. A demon behind the reader holds in his left hand a staff with a jester's head (personification of folly?) and in his right a very large feather. On the scholar's feet a strewn books with words on their spines: Borrow; Boyle; Newton; Radclife; Friend; Mead, etc. Temporary local subject terms: The pictures on the wall are portraits labelled 'Cromwell' and 'Mortimer' but depict Olver Cromwell and Mortimer, Earl of March
Description:
Title and publication date from British Museum catalogue., Two lines of verse above image: Here folly, ignorance and pride combine, to prove him of the true Duncean line., Six lines of quotation below image: Studious he sate, with all his books around, sinking from thought to thought a vast profound ..., Truman's notes about the print are shelved as: LWL Mss Group 1 File 8., and Mounted to 32 x 39 cm.
Publisher:
publisher not identified
Subject (Name):
Mortimer, Cromwell, -1752 and Pope, Alexander, 1688-1744.
Subject (Topic):
Libraries (Rooms & spaces), Owls, Quacks, and Demons
Christ is shown with his disciples, gestering toward the sick in the distance who are beign carriet to an antique building in the left background, presumably a hospital
Alternative Title:
In as much as ye have done it unto one of the least of these...
Description:
Title from Paulson., Text continues: ... my Brethern, ye have done it unto me. St. Matt. XXV. v: 40., Sheet trimmed to plate mark., Ms. note in Steevens's hand in pencil above print: Christ and his Disciples. See Mr. Nichols's book, 3d edit. p. 435 & 444. See also John Ireland's Hogarth Illustrated, p. 373. In pencil at lower right below print: See page 104., and On page 101 in volume 2.
Hogarth's print for the subscription ticket for "Garrick in the Character of Richard III" with an image of a rolled manuscript, a laurel wreath, palette and mask suspended from a rope or piece of drapery
Alternative Title:
Subscription ticket for Garrick in the Character of Richard III
Description:
Title, date, and printmaker from Paulson., Imperfect; sheet trimmed with loss of receipt., Ms. note in pencil in Steevens's hand at top of page: See Mr. Nichols's book, 3d edit., p. 281., and On page 122 in volume 2.