Two flying demons tip out of a sack a supply of Scottish clergymen, politicians, doctors etc. arriving in England. Engraving, 1772.
- Date:
- [1772]
- Reference:
- 584787i
- Pictures
About this work
Description
"Towards the end of the last century, however, when no little soreness was felt by the English vulgar of all classes at the success of the numerous Scotchmen who, having come adventurers to London, had reached places of high rank and influence, the general feeling was expressed by a caricature representing two winged fiends in the air emptying out of a large hamper all the conspicuously successful Scotchmen of the time-parsons, physicians, soldiers, sailors, statesmen—while one of the fiends exclaims, "There's a plentiful stock of Scotch caterpillars for poor England." A fiend on the earth says, "I and my brother fiends couldn't spit our spite more effectually." The indifference of the proper guardians of England is exemplified by a figure of a gentleman, with his back turned to the raining vermin, quietly blowing soap bubbles, and the print is called the Origin of Scotch Ministers and Managers,' and has for its motto the following couplet from Swift: "They go from the devil to court, And from court to the devil again."--The London and Westminster review, loc. cit.
The man blowing bubbles, seen from behind, may be King George III: the bubble-blowing would indicate leisure and indifference, though the British Museum catalogue (loc. cit.) interprets it as speculation
Publication/Creation
Physical description
Lettering
References note
Reference
Type/Technique
Languages
Where to find it
Location Status Access Closed stores