Contrasted opinions of Paine's pamphlet

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Frederick George Byron
1764-1792
Contrasted opinions of Paine's pamphlet
etching, hand colored
plate mark: 272 x 560 mm; sheet: 259 x 524 mm (trimmed)
Peel 3398
Published: 
London : Pubd. May 26, 1791 by William Holland, No. 50 Oxford Street, [26 May 1791]
Provenance: 
Formerly owned by Sir Robert Peel.
Notes: 

Attributed to F.G. Byron. See An Oxford Companion to the Romantic Age ... / Iain McCalman. Oxford : Published by Oxford University Press, 2001, p. 20.
Below image on right: In Holland's exhibition rooms may be seen the largest collection of caricatures in Europe. Admitte. on shilg.
Not in the Catalogue of prints and drawings in the British Museum. Division I, political and personal satires.
Library's copy trimmed within plate mark.

Summary: 

Eight figures in two rows are depicted reading Thomas Paine's pamphlet The Rights of Man, each gesturing dramatically and each with a lengthy quote above his head either praising or denouncing the ideas expressed. On the top row are Edmund Burke (reading the passages referring to himself), Charles Fox, George III, and Charles Jenkinson. In the second row, Queen Charlotte, Mary Wollstonecraft Godwin, William Pitt, and Richard Sheridan seem to address each other in a similarly lively debate of contrasting responses to Paine's arguments.

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