Anti-saccharrites, or, John Bull and his family leaving off the use of sugar : to the masters & mistresses of families in Great Britain this noble example in economy is respecfully submitted.

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James Gillray
1756-1815
Anti-saccharrites, or, John Bull and his family leaving off the use of sugar : to the masters & mistresses of families in Great Britain this noble example in economy is respecfully submitted.
etching
image: 303 x 396 mm; plate: 312 x 396 mm; sheet: 320 x 403 mm
Purchased by J. Pierpont Morgan, 1900.
Peel 2767
Published: 
[London] : Pubd. March 27th 1792 by H. Humphrey, No. 18 Old Bond Street, [1792]
Provenance: 
Formerly owned by Sir Robert Peel.
Notes: 

Title from caption.
Printmaker from BM Satires.

Summary: 

The King, Queen, and six Princesses, three quarter length, are seated round a frugal tea-table. The King, in profile to the right, faces his daughters, holding his cup and saucer to his lips, and saying, with a staring eye, "delicious! delicious". The Queen sits in the centre behind the small tea-pot, holding her cup and saucer in bony fingers, and looking with a wide and cunning smile towards the Princesses, saying, "O my dear Creatures, do but Taste it! You can't think how nice it is without Sugar: - and then consider how much Work you'll save the poor Blackeemoors by leaving off the use of it! - and above all, remember how much expence it will save your poor Papa! - O its charming cooling Drink!" The Princess Royal sits at the end of the row, on the extreme right, with four sisters diminishing in age on her right, a sixth just indicated behind the Queen. They hold, but do not drink, cups of tea, with expressions varying from sulky discontent to defiant surprise.

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