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Bank-notes, paper-money, French-alarmists, O, the devil, the devil! ah! poor John-Bull!!!

Title
Bank-notes, paper-money, French-alarmists, O, the devil, the devil! ah! poor John-Bull!!! [graphic] / Js. Gy. invt. et fect.
Publication
[London] : Pub. March 1st, 1797, by H. Humphrey, New Bond Street, [1 March 1797]
Physical Description
1 print : etching ; plate mark 25.5 x 35.7 cm, on sheet 29 x 39 cm
Medium
wove paper
Local Notes
Temporary local subject terms: Sacks of money -- Bank notes.
Notes
Title etched below image.
BEIN GEN MSS 1387: Forms part of the W. J. Linton collection. For a full description of the collection, search by call number.
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
"Pitt (left) as a bank-clerk, very thin and much caricatured, a pen thrust through his wig, stands behind an L-shaped counter offering a handful of bank-notes to John Bull. In his right hand is a scoop with which he sweeps up notes from the counter. John is the yokel of BMSat 8141, but no longer bewildered; he stands stolidly, holding out his left hand for the notes, his right hand in his coat pocket. Fox (right), who wears a high cocked hat with tricolour cockade, bag-wig, and laced suit, says to him: "Dont take his damn'd Paper, John! insist upon having Gold, to make your Peace with the French, when they come". Sheridan bends towards John, saying, "Dont take his Notes! nobody takes Notes now! - they'll not even take Mine!" John answers: "I wool take it! - a' may as well let my Measter Billy hold the Gold to keep away you Frenchmen, as save it, to gee it you, when ye come over, with your domn'd invasion." Behind (right) hands of other Foxites are raised in warning, and on the extreme right is the profile of Stanhope. Behind (left), men hasten towards Pitt with large sacks of notes on their heads. The first two, in judge's robes, are Loughborough with a sack of '20 Shilling Notes', and Kenyon with one of 'Five Pound Notes'. Behind is Grenville with a sack of '10 Shilling Notes'. Other sacks whose bearers are hidden are inscribed '5 Shilling No[tes], 2 Shillin No[tes]', and 'One Shilling'. Under Pitt's counter is a row of large sacks of gold, padlocked and inscribed '£'. On the end of the counter, facing the spectator, is posted a bill headed: 'Order of Council to the Bank of England'."--British Museum online catalogue.
Format
Images
Language
English
Added to Catalog
March 19, 2008
References
Catalogue of prints and drawings in the British Museum, v. 7, no. 8990
Wright, T. Works of James Gillray, the caricaturist, p. 219
Genre/Form
Satires (Visual works) - England - 1797.
Etchings - England - London - 1797.
Citation

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