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The soliloquy

Title
The soliloquy [graphic] / S.B.
Publication
[London] : Pubd. Augt. 12th, 1782, by H. Humphrey, New Bond Street, [12 August 1782]
Physical Description
1 print : etching ; sheet 29 x 22 cm
Notes
Title etched below image.
Printmaker from British Museum catalogue.
Sheet trimmed within plate mark.
Provenance
From a collection in twelve volumes probably compiled by Francis Harvey and sold at auction, Sotheby, London, June 1900. Bequest of Hugh Dudley Auchincloss to Yale University Library, 1981. Bound by Riviere & Son in three-quarters red morocco with gold tooling and gold lettering on spine.
Summary
"Design in an oval. Fox with a very melancholy expression, standing with folded arms facing three quarter to left outside a closed and padlocked gate repeating Wolsey's soliloquy from Henry the Eighth. The gate fills an archway, its top being of iron spikes, the padlock is inscribed Fast. The stone arch over the gate is inscribed Treasury. On the stone wall of the Treasury building (left) are torn placards. One is a broadside, 'Last Dying Speech' headed by a print of a man hanging from a gibbet; another is headed "Gamester". Beneath the title is inscribed: "Farewell, a long Farewell to all my Greatness! this is the state of Man, to Day he puts forth the tender leaves of hopes, tomorrow Blossoms & bears all his blushing Honours thick upon him: the Third Day comes a Frost a killing Froast [sic], & when he thinks good easy Man full surely his Greatness is a Ripening, nips his Root & then befalls as I do!"--British Museum online catalogue.
Format
Images
Language
English
Added to Catalog
February 10, 2005
References
Catalogue of prints and drawings in the British Museum, v. 5, no. 6020
Genre/Form
Satires (Visual works) - England - 1782.
Etchings - England - London - 1782.
Citation

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