Neddy's black box : containing what he does not value three skipps of a louse / JS ft.

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Thomas Rowlandson
1756-1827
Neddy's black box : containing what he does not value three skipps of a louse / JS ft.
etching, hand colored
image: 209 x 331 mm; sheet: 235 x 331 mm
Peel 3369
Published: 
[London] : Pubd. 30 Janry., 1789, by S. Fores, No. 3 Picadilly [sic], [1789]
Provenance: 
Formerly owned by Sir Robert Peel.
Notes: 

Title etched below image.
Printmaker identified in the British Museum catalogue as Rowlandson imitating James Sayers's signature.
Two lines of text below title: "Why not debate it on Friday, I say it is the only day in the year on which it ought to be debated (Charles's martyrdom) and carried up in the black box." Vide Mr. Burk-s speech on Tuesday last.
Library's copy trimmed within plate mark.

Summary: 

"Burke kneels before a throne, from which the Prince of Wales has risen, eagerly holding out his hands for the head of Charles I which Burke proffers in a round box inscribed 'Treasury Box'; he says, "My Liege I told them in the House no day so proper to settle the Regency as Charles's Martyrdom". Sheridan stands behind Burke, leaning eagerly forward, and saying with a sinister scowl: "I too am for Dispatch such days best suit our Purpose"; from his pocket hangs a paper: 'Horn Tooke's Letter on the Princes Marriage' ('Prince' appears to have been scored through) ..."--British Museum online catalogue.

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