"And scarcely had heMaggie rallied,When out the hellish legionsallied"—Burns.
"And scarcely had heMaggie rallied,When out the hellish legionsallied"—Burns.
A Scene from the Midsummer Night's Dream—Titania, Bottom, MustardSeed, Peas Blossom, Moth, and Cobweb, 1853 This picture illustrates theline "Nod to him elves, and do him courtesies."Cinderella, 1854.OnGuard, 1858.Cinderella, 1859.The Sober Man's Sunday and theDrunkard's Sunday, 1859.The first appearance of William Shakespeareon the stage of the Globe, with part of his dramatic company, in 1564,1867), 240.Royal (The) Aquarium, London, 69, 107, 160."Royal (The) Rushlight" (print published by G. Humphrey 3 March 1821),25."R-y-l Stripes."SeeKick.Rubens, Peter Paul (born 28 June 1577, died 30 May 1640), 69.Rusher, printer of Banbury, Oxfordshire, 155.Ruskin, John (No. 9955 G in the George Cruikshank collection in theSouth Kensington Museum is a pen-sketch entitledMr Ruskin's Head. Thehead has no beard), 147, 155-156, 159, 244, 247.Russell, George (A. E.), 161.Sailors, 95-96."Sailor's (The) Progress," series of etched illustrations in 6compartments, signed "I.[=J] S. and G. CK. delt., G. CK. sculpt.,"published 10 Jan. 1818 by G. Humphrey, 95."S[ain]t James's or the Court of Queen Anne. An Historical Romance byWilliam Harrison Ainsworth" (3 vols., London: John Mortimer, 1844), 90,91.Sala, George Augustus (author of "George Cruikshank: A Life Memory," inThe Gentleman's Magazine, May 1878), 15, 77.Satan, 28, 119, 133, 134, 244."Satirist (The), or Monthly Meteor" (14 vols., London: Samuel Tipper,1808-1814. George Cruikshank's signature appears to plates in NewSeries, vol. iii., 1813, vol. iv., 1814. He also contributedplates to "The Tripod, or New Satirist," for 1814, July 1 and Aug. 1,the only numbers published), 35.Savoyards. SeeFrench.Scale (The) of Justice Reversed(caricature published 19 March 1815,by S. W. Fores),5.Scene (A) from the Midsummer Night's Dream.SeeRoyal Academy, 1853.Schopenhauer, Arthur, 207.Scotch Washing(Cruikshank del., published by T. Tegg, 16 Aug. 1810),175.Scott, Sir Walter, 81, 139, 147.SeeLandscape-Historical, Twelve."Scourge (The), or Monthly Expositor of Imposture and Folly" (11 vols.,)London, 1811-1816; continued in 1816 as "The Scourge and Satirist," ofwhich only 6 numbers appeared;7 and 43 (Preparing John Bull for General Congress),19 (Napoleon's Trip from Elba),20 (Quadrupeds),24 (The Coronation of the Empress of the NairsandThe Phenix of Elba),26 (The Return to Office),27 (Interior View of the House of GodandJohn Bull's Three Stages),31 (The Cow Pox Tragedy),51 (The Dinner of the Four-in-hand Club),139-140 (A Financial Survey of Cumberland)."Scraps and Sketches," by George Cruikshank (4 parts [1828-1832] and oneplate [1834] published by the Artist at 22 Myddelton [also speltMyddleton] Terrace, Pentonville. In 1830 George Cruikshank writes that"Scraps and Sketches" "is the third work which I have published on myown account"), 35-36,37, 39, 51, 111-112, 116, 143,163, 172, 204, 212,215-216, 223.Sellis, 140.Seymour, Jane, 90.Shakespeare, William, 183-184, 187-188. SeeFirst,Life,Juliet,Royal Academy, 1853, 1867.Shakespeare's Cliff, 107, 108.SeeDistant.Sheppard, Jack,79,80SeeJack.Sheridan, Richard Brinsley Butler (born Sept. 1751, died 7 July 1816), 15.SeeImpostor.Sheringham, Lieut. John, 95.Sir Frizzle Pumpkin.SeeAdventures of Sir."Sir Lionel Flamstead, a Sketch," by W. Harrison Ainsworth, identicalwith "The Old London Merchant, a Fragment," which was Ainsworth'scontribution to "The Pic Nic Papers. By Various Hands. Edited by CharlesDickens, Esq.... With illustrations by George Cruikshank, Phiz, &c. Inthree volumes" (London: Henry Colburn, 1841), 93."Sketches by 'Boz,' illustrative of every-day life, and every-daypeople" (3 vols., London: John Macrone, 1836, 1837. Many of theillustrations were enlarged and re-etched for the edition, complete inone vol., published by Chapman & Hall in 1839, and issued in 20 numbers),99-100,101,105, 112.Sleap, Joseph, 35."Slice (A) of Bread and Butter, Cut by G. Cruikshank. Being thesubstance of a speech delivered at a public meeting, held for thebenefit of the Jews' and General Literary and Mechanics' Institute"(London: William Tweedie), 59.Smirke, Robert (painter, born 1752, died 5 Jan. 1845; the date of hisillustrations of "Gil Blas" is 1809), 199.Smith, Albert, 39.Smith, Egerton.SeeElysium, Melange.Smith, Horace (born 1779, died 1849).SeeRejected.Smith, James (born 1775, died 1839).SeeRejected.Smoking, 58, 59. SeeTobacco.Smollett, Tobias, 90, 184, 188, 191.SeeIllustrations of Smollett.Sober (The) Man's Sunday, and the Drunkard's Sunday.SeeRoyalAcademy, 1859.Socrates, 180,181."Songs, Naval and National, of the late Charles Dibdin, with a memoirand addenda collected and arranged by Thomas Dibdin, with characteristicsketches by George Cruikshank" (London: John Murray, 1841), 175,245.Sotheby, Wilkinson & Hodge, 13 Wellington Street, Strand, London, W. C.,70, 108, 119, 160.South Kensington Museum (=Victoria and Albert Museum), collection ofGeorge Cruikshank's work,13, 111, 112,113. SeeChristian,First,Lilla, Original, Palace, Ruskin."Specimens of German Romance, selected and translated [by G. Soane] fromvarious authors. In three volumes" (London: Geo. B. Whittaker, 1826),151 (E. T. W. Hoffmann,q. v.).Spencer, Walter, 107.Spielmann, Marion H. (F.S.A.),120.Stays. See R[egen]t.Steel, 192, 236.Stephens, Frederic G. (author of "A Memoir of George Cruikshank," towhich is added Thackeray's Essay "On the Genius of George Cruikshank,"London: Sampson Low, Marston, Searle & Rivington, 1891), 32, 93.Stewart, John, 66."Stop Thief; or, Hints to Housekeepers to Prevent Housebreaking. ByGeorge Cruikshank" (London: Bradbury & Evans, 1851. G. and R. Cruikshankassisted in the embellishment of Lieut. Col. Baron De Berenger's "Helpsand Hints How to Protect Life and Property" [London: T. Hurst, 1835]),58.Stowe, Harriet Beecher.SeeUncle.Striking Effects Produced by Lines and Dots for the assistance of youngDraftsmen(2 etchings published respectively 4 Aug. 1817 and 23 Sept.1817 by S. W. Fores. In the same year G. Blackman, 362 Oxford St,London, published 2 more etchings by George Cruikshank entitledTwelveSubjects formed by Dots and Lines[pub. 14 June] andNine Subjectsformed by Dots and Lines[pub 19 July]. To George Cruikshank is alsoattributed an etching entitledAnother Series formed of Lines andDots), 243."Stubb's Calendar; or, the Fatal Boots," 196."Sunday in London. Illustrated in fourteen cuts, by George Cruikshank,and a few words by a friend of his; with a copy of Sir Andrew Agnew'sBill" (London: Effingham Wilson, 1833; the friend in thetitle is John Wight), 51, 99.Sussex, Duke of.SeeAugustus, Illustrations of Popular.Syntax, Dr., 71.SeeLife of Napoleon."Table (The) Book."SeeEvery-Day."Tales of Irish Life, illustrative of the manners, customs andconditions of the people, by I. Whitty" (2 vols., London: J. Robins &Co., 1824), 93."Talpa: or the Chronicles of a Clay Farm. An Agricultural Fragment. ByC. W. H." (London: Reeve & Co., 1852. The author is C. W. Hoskyns), 208.Tam o' Shanter.SeeRoyal Academy, 1852.Temperance, 48, 49, 52et seq., 247 George Cruikshank's "Last temperancepiece" wasThe Last Half Hourin S. C. Hall's "An Old Story" (1875).SeeBottle, Drunkard, Drunkard's, Glass, Oil, Worship.Tenniel, Sir John, 176.Thackeray, William Makepeace (born 18 July 1811, died 23 or 24 Dec.1863), 1, 25, 69, 78 196, 231-232.SeeStephens, Frederic G.Thames, 78.Thistlewood, Arthur (born 1770, hanged 1 May 1820), 3, 35.Thompson, Alice.SeeMeynell, Mrs Alice.Thompson, John (wood-engraver, born 25 May 1785, died 20 Feb. 1866. Atthe Paris Exhibition of 1855, he was awarded the grand medal of honourfor wood-engraving. He engraved the cuts for "Mornings at Bow Street"and "The Beauties of Washington Irving," &c.), 126, 129, 162, 239.SeeTrue.Thomson, James, 11.Thornhill, Sir James (Hogarth's father-in-law), 78."Three Courses and a Dessert. The Decorations by George Cruikshank"(London: Vizetelly, Branston & Co., 1830. The author is W. Clarke), 215."Three (The) Cruikshanks. A Bibliographical Catalogue, describing morethan 500 works ... illustrated by Isaac, George, and Robert Cruikshank,compiled by Frederick Marchmont.... The introduction by Julian Moore,with illustrations" (London: W. T. Spencer, 1897. A useful book.Prices are appended, which should not in some instancesbe paid by the collector who has time to look about him. Thefrontispiece, reproducing George Cruikshank's oil-paintingA Mother'sLove, reminds one of William Blake's drawing in sepia of a motherdiscovering her child in an eagle's nest).Time.SeeIllustrations of Time.Titian (=Tiziano Vecellio), 2, 69.Tobacco (The most interesting anti-tobacco publication associated withGeorge Cruikshank is "What Put My Pipe Out; or, Incidents in the Life ofa Clergyman," published in London by S. W. Partridge, 1862), 58, 59."Tom Thumb; a Burletta, altered from Henry Fielding, by Kane O'Hara.With Designs by George Cruikshank" (London: Thomas Rodd, 1830), 156(where Ruskin may be supposed by anyone who thinks, as I do not, that hewas incapable of alapsus calami, to refer to the designs for thisvolume)."Topsail-Sheet Blocks, or, The Naval Foundling. By 'The Old Sailor'" (3vols., London: Richard Bentley, 1838, the author is M. H. Barker), 95.Tothill Fields,87."Tower (The) of London," by William Harrison Ainsworth (13 parts, thelast 2 forming a double part. London: Richard Bentley, 1840), 60, 81-82,83, 85."Town Talk, or Living Manners" (5 vols., London: J. Johnson, 1811-1814.A periodical. George Cruikshank, contributed to vols. ii. [1812], iv.[1813], v. [1813]), 35."Travels (The) and Surprising Adventures of Baron Munchausen.Illustrated with Five woodcuts by G. Cruikshank, and Twenty-twofull-page curious engravings." (London: William Tegg, 1867. The authoris R. E. Raspe. The Cruikshank cuts were "used before in other books,"says Capt. Douglas. George Cruikshank also contributed a frontispiece to"The Surprising Travels and Adventures of the Renowned BaronMunchausen," printed and sold by Dean & Munday, Threadneedle Street,London, 1817), 219.Triumph (The) of Cupid, etching in "George Cruikshank's Table-Book"(1845), 67, 223-4."True (The) Legend of St Dunstan and the Devil, Showing how theHorse-Shoe came to be a Charm against Witchcraft. By Edward G. Flight.With illustrations drawn by George Cruikshank and engraved by JohnThompson" (London: D. Bogue, 1848), 119,122,123.Trusler, Rev. Dr., author of "Hogarth Moralized." (For an edition of thatwork published by John Major in 1831, George Cruikshank engraved 4groups of heads after Hogarth), 77.Turpin, Dick,75, 77.Twain, Mark, 234."Twelve Sketches illustrative of Sir Walter Scott's Demonology andWitchcraft, by George Cruikshank" (London: J. Robins & Co., 1830), 139,147-148."Uncle Tom's Cabin," by Harriet Beecher Stowe (London: John Cassell,1852), 10, 39."Universal (The) Songster; or Museum of Mirth: forming the mostcomplete, extensive, and valuable collection of ancient and modern songsin the English language...." (3 vols., London: John Fairburn, 1825,1826), 136-137.Vaccination. SeeCow, Vaccination againstVaccination against Small Pox or Mercenary and Merciless spreaders ofDeath and Devastation driven out of Society(caricature signedCruikshank del. Published by S. W. Fores, 20 June 1808), 31."Vicar (The) of Wakefield," 191-192,193.SeeRoyal Academy, 1830.Victoria and Albert Museum.SeeSouth Kensington.Victoria, Queen, 40, 44, 247.SeeOriginal."Voice (The) of Humanity for the Communication and Discussion of allsubjects relative to the Conduct of Man towards the Inferior AnimalCreation" (London: J. Nisbet 1830 [sic]. The etching by Geo.Cruikshank entitledThe Knackers[sic]Yard, or the Horses[sic]last home! is herewithoutthe notice "Licensed for SlaughteringHorses."The Knackers Yardappeared in the number for May 1831, andre-appeared in vol iii [the title-page of which is dateless], with thewords "Licensed for Slaughtering Horses," added to the design. In thefirst state of the plate as published is the date 1831), 220.Wardle, Col, Gwyllym Lloyd (member for Oakhampton, Devon, who, in theHouse of Commons, 27 Jan. 1809, made the charge against theDuke of York of implication in the misuse of money realised by the saleof commissions), 26.Watts, George Frederick (born 1817, died 1904), 2."Waverley," by Sir Walter Scott,169, 175, 192.Wedmore, Frederick, 100, 115.Westminster Abbey, 86, 89."What Put My Pipe Out."SeeTobacco.Whistler, James McNeill (borncirca1835, died July 1903), 78.White, engraver.SeeLife in Paris. (There was a wood engraver calledHenry White, a pupil of Bewick who "produced much good work, notably theillustrations for Hone's 'House that Jack Built,' 'The MatrimonialLadder,' [sic] &c.Vide'Bryan's Dictionary of Painters andEngravers," revised ed. 1905).White, Rev. James (born 1803, died 1862).SeeAdventures of Sir.Whittington,SeeDick.Whitty, I., 93.SeeTales.Wight, John.SeeMore, Mornings, Sunday.Wilberforce, William (born 24 Aug. 1759 died 29 July 1833). SeeNewUnion.Wild, Jonathan,79.Wilde, Oscar, 183-184.Willesden Churchyard,79."Windsor Castle, an Historical Romance," by W. Harrison Ainsworth (newedition, illustrated by George Cruikshank, and Tony Johannot, withdesigns on wood by W. Alfred Delamotte. London: Henry Colborn, 1843. Thefirst edition, also 1843, has only 3 etchings), 89, 90, 135,137.Winsor, Frederick Albert.SeeWinzer.Winzer (born 1763, died 11 May 1830. One of the pioneers of gas lightingand son of Friedrich Albrecht Winzer. Apparently he was named after hisfather, but he anglicised his name and biography knows him as FrederickAlbert Winsor). 31.'Wits (The) Magazine and Attic Miscellany' (2 vols., London: ThomasTegg, 1818),209.Woman (The) Taken in Adultery, or Mary Magdalen(caricature ascribedby G. W. Reid to George Cruikshank. Published by S. W. Fores, 15 March1809), 27.Women, 43.Woodward, H. 12.Wooler, Thomas Jonathan (born 1785 or 1786, died 29 Oct. 1853, editor of"The Black Dwarf" which started 29 Jan. 1817. He was atallman), 35."Works (The) of George Cruikshank Classified and Arranged withReferences to Reid's Catalogue and their approximate values By Capt. R.J. H. Douglas, with a frontispiece" (London: printed by J. Davy & Sons,1903. Though not quite exhaustive and with several errors this book isindispensable to the collector. It is the only bibliography whichattempts to include all the artist's works to the date of his death)."World's (The) Show, 1851, or the Adventures of Mr and Mrs Sandboys andFamily, who came up to London to enjoy themselves, and to see the GreatExhibition, by Henry Mayhew and George Cruikshank" (London: DavidBogue, 1851. First published in 8 parts. The title-page here quoted isthe one designed by G. Cruikshank, but above the first line of text thetitle is as quoted on p. 44).Worship (The) of Bacchus, oil-painting by George Cruikshank (1862),65-70.SeeOil painting.Worship (The) of Bacchus, or the Drinking Customs of Society, showinghow universally the intoxicating liquors are used upon every occasion inlife from the cradle to the grave. The figures outlined onthe steel plate by George Cruikshank and the engraving finished byCharles Mottram(London: William Tweedie, 1864), 65.Wright, Thomas (M.A., F.S.A.), Author of "Caricature History of theGeorges" (1867), 11.Xantippe,181.Yarmouth, The Countess of 4, 24.Yedis, 28.York, Duke of.SeeFrederick.
It is not uncommon for Mr, Mrs, Dr, and St not to have periods at thetime the book was published, (1908).Missing punctuation has been added.Page 32 and sea—betweeen which they strut. The word betweeen changedto between.Page 280 Wardle, Col., Gwyllym Lloyd (member for Oakhampton, Devon, who,in the House of Commons, 27 Jany. 1809, Jany. Changed to Jan.