Caption title.
A reissue, print originally published by Thomas Harmar, February 11, 1788.
Lord George Gordon dines in Newgate, waited upon by Jews. He sits in profile to the right before a small circular table; a Jewish man holding a plate offers him food in a spoon. Another wearing a hat and old-fashioned laced waistcoat stands (right) holding a dish. Four others hasten towards the table from the right. A Jew wearing a gaberdine and skull-cap with a goat-like beard stands behind his chair; another wearing a hat and a voluminous gown stands full face on Gordon's left, holding up his arms in rapture at the distinguished convict. Through a stone archway (left) an English cook advances, carrying a sucking-pig on a dish. A caricatured Jewish man is about to kick him; another, holding his nose, hastens after him, his arm raised threateningly. In the foreground (left) a spaniel gnaws a bone. Massive stone masonry and a barred window high up in the wall indicate Newgate. Gordon's lank hair falls on his shoulders and he has a beard, but only he and the English cook are not caricatured. See British Museum Online Catalog.