The state tinkers

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James Gillray
1756-1815
The state tinkers
etching
image: 282 x 238 mm; sheet: 352 x 255 mm
Purchased by J. Pierpont Morgan, 1900.
Peel 2322
Published: 
[London] : Publish'd Feby. 10th, 1780, by W. Humphrey No. 227 Strand, [1780]
Provenance: 
Formerly owned by Sir Robert Peel.
Notes: 

Title from item.
Attributed to Gillray by BM Satires.
Eight lines of verse in two columns below caption title: The National Kettle, which once was a good one, ...
Library's copy trimmed within plate mark.

Summary: 

Print shows three men with mallet, hammer, and chisel, breaking an enormous bowl which is already much damaged. The bowl is supported on its end by a block (left) on which stand two of the tinkers. On the ground (right) kneels Lord North, working on the interior of the bowl with a hammer and chisel. On the ground beside him is a paper inscribed "Ld North". Behind the bowl (left), and about to strike it with a large mallet, a man dressed as an artisan stands on a block; a paper in his pocket is inscribed "Ld Sandwich" and pasted on the wall behind his head is a "List of the Navy". Next him, wielding a hammer and chisel, is a man dressed as a military officer; the "Plan of Minden" on the wall behind his head shows that he is Lord George Germain. Behind North, his hands raised in pleased surprise, stands George III, wearing a feathered turban surmounted by a crown, probably intended to indicate that he is behaving like an oriental despot. Over his shoulder looks Bute in tartan, also smiling, his right hand raised, as if admonishing the king. Cf. BM Satires.

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