Aug. 1. Hot Goose, Cabbage, and Cucumbers.
The Tooth Ache, or Torment and Torture.
Sept. 18. The Chance-seller of the Exchequer Putting an
Extinguisher on Lotteries. Ackermann; also
Fairburn, Ludgate Hill.
C. M. Westmacott. The Spirit of the Public Journals
for the year 1823. 3 vols. 8vo.
Third Tour of Doctor Syntax. 1823. Royal 8vo.
The three Tours of Doctor Syntax. Pocket edition,
3 vols. 16mo.
Sept. Oliver Goldsmith.--'The Vicar of Wakefield.' 8vo.
24 illustrations by Rowlandson. Pub. by R.
Ackermann.
1824.
Apr. 1. Interruption, or Inconvenience of a Lodging House.
Reprint. (See 1789.)
1825.
Nov. 19. Pie-us Ecstasy, or Godliness (the Itinerant
Preacher's) Great Gain. Pub. by A. Bengo.
Bernard Blackmantle. (Charles Molloy Westmacott.)
English Spy. 2 vols. 8vo. Do.
The Spirit of the Public Journals for the years
1823-4-5. (See 1823.)
Posthumous.
The Humourist, with 50 engravings, &c., after
designs by the late Thomas Rowlandson. Published
1831.
_ADDENDUM TO THE CHRONOLOGICAL SUMMARY OF ROWLANDSON'S CARICATURES._
The Editor has found it necessary to append a supplementary list of
subjects which have been brought under his notice too late either to
be arranged in the body of the present work, or even to be comprised
in the general chronological summary; his attention being directed to
these additional caricatures long after he had reluctantly arrived at
the conclusion that it was hopeless to expect to render the foregoing
classification more complete.
In the Introduction to this review of pictorial satires by Thomas
Rowlandson allusions will be found (vol. i. p. 4) to a noteworthy
collection of his productions, both social and political, in course of
formation by Mr. F. Harvey, of St. James's Street, the result of many
years' vigilant activity in securing everything of consequence by the
artist which happened to come into the print market, with comparative
indifference to cost.
The arrangement of this gathering, already amounting to twenty-three
volumes, consisting entirely of excellent examples of the
caricaturist's engraved works, has been proceeding coincidently with
the preparation of the present volumes, and both selections have been
brought as near to completion as is practicable at precisely the same
time.
The writer has the satisfaction of realising that the promise referred
to in his preface, made by Mr. Harvey many years ago, has been redeemed
before it is altogether worthless, as concerns his desire to supply a
summary of the caricaturist's published productions as comprehensive
as circumstances are likely to permit, to which much importance is
attached from a collector's point of view.
It must be acknowledged that the extensive accumulation in the
possession of Mr. Harvey has contributed to this result, if at the
eleventh hour; in his collection numerous examples of interest are
found which have hitherto escaped the Editor's researches. Many of
the titles set down in the body of the foregoing Summary and in the
Addendum, drawn from the resources placed at his disposal by the
kindness of Mr. Harvey, are in all probability perfectly novel to the
majority of even experienced 'Rowlandson fanciers.'
No date.
A Counsellor's Opinion after he had retired from
Practice.
1790.
Croesus and Thalia.
All Fours. Designed by H. Bunbury. Rowlandson
sculp.
Nov. 20. Satan, Sin, and Death. W. Hogarth invt. Rowlandson
del.
Dec. 1. A series of single-figure subjects, designed by
Woodward and engraved by Rowlandson.
A Smart. A Greenhorn.
A Jessamy. A Choice Spirit.
A Jemmy. A Buck.
An Honest Fellow. A Blood.
1791.
Mar. 1. The Pursuit. (Chase of a Highwayman by a _possé_
of horsemen.) A large and important subject.
Companion to 'The Attack,' published contemporaneously,
and described in vol. i. p. 289.
Dec. 1. Returning from the Races.