Anti-Sacharrites, - or - John Bull and His Family Leaving off the Use of Sugar
1792
206
James Gillray, 1756–1815, British
Malagrida, Driving Post
207
James Gillray, 1756–1815, British
The Power of Beauty; - St. Cecillia Charming the Brute; - or - The Seduction of the Welch-Ambassador (from: Caricature, vol. 2)
1792
208
James Gillray, 1756–1815, British
A Sphere, Projecting against a Plane ---
1792
209
James Gillray, 1756–1815, British
La Derniere Resource; - or - Van-Buchells
1791
210
James Gillray, 1756–1815, British
Wha Wants Me?
1792
211
James Gillray, 1756–1815, British
An Excrescence; - Afungus; - Alias - A Toadstool Upon a Dung-Hill
1791
212
James Gillray, 1756–1815, British
The National Assembly Petrified _________/The National Assembly Revivified
1792
213
James Gillray, 1756–1815, British
The Royal-Bull-Fight
1795
214
James Gillray, 1756–1815, British
Freedom (France) - Slavery (Britain)
1789
215
James Gillray, 1756–1815, British
Betty Canning (Gunning) Revived, or a Peep at the Conjuration of Mary Squires and the Gipsy Family
1791
216
Print made by James Gillray, 1756–1815, British
Taming of the Shrew. Katharine and Petruchio - The Modern Quixotte, or, What You Will
1791
217
James Gillray, 1756–1815, British
The Hustings-Vox Populi, - "We'll Have a Mug! - A Mug! - A Mug! / Mayor of Garret--" (Fox) (from: Caricature, vol. 1)
1796
218
James Gillray, 1756–1815, British
The Impeachment, - or - "The Father of the Gang, Turn'd Kings-Evidence"
1791
219
James Gillray, 1756–1815, British
Meeting of - Unfortunate Citoyens. " Dismay of Two Disgraced Patriots"
1798
220
James Gillray, 1756–1815, British
St. George's Volunteers Charging Down Bond Street, After Clearing the Ring in Hyde Park, and Storming the Dunghill at Marybone
1797
221
James Gillray, 1756–1815, British
Patern-Staff - Weymouth
1797
222
James Gillray, 1756–1815, British
Le Coup de Maitre
1797
223
James Gillray, 1756–1815, British
The Tree of Liberty, - With The Devil Tempting John Bull (Fox)
1798
224
James Gillray, 1756–1815, British
Shrine at St. Ann's Hill
1798
225
James Gillray, 1756–1815, British
The Tree of Liberty
1797
226
James Gillray, 1756–1815, British
Taking Physick; - or - The News of Shooting the King of Sweden!
1792
227
Print made by James Gillray, 1756–1815, British
Flannel-Armour; Female-Patriotism, -or- Modern Heroes Accoutred for the Wars
1793
228
James Gillray, 1756–1815, British
The Slough of Despond----; Vide - The Patriots Progress
1793
229
James Gillray, 1756–1815, British
Presentation of the Mahometan Credentials - or - The Final Resource of French Atheists (from: Caricature, vol. 2)
1793
230
James Gillray, 1756–1815, British
The Bishop of a Tun's Breeches; - or - The Flaming Eveque, Purifying the House of Office
1792
231
James Gillray, 1756–1815, British
The Eruption of the Mountain - or - The Horrors of the Bocca Del Inforno----With the Head of the Protector Saint Januarius Carried in Processions by the Cardinal Archeveque of the Lazaroni
1794
232
James Gillray, 1756–1815, British
The Chancellor of the Inquisition Marking the Incorrigibles
1793
233
James Gillray, 1756–1815, British
A Democrat, - or - Reason and Philosophy
1793
234
James Gillray, 1756–1815, British
John Bull Bother'd; - or - The Geese Alarming the Capitol
1792
235
James Gillray, 1756–1815, British
Dumourier Dining in State at St. James on the 15th of May 1793
1793
236
James Gillray, 1756–1815, British
Alecto and Her Train, at the Gate of Pandeomonium; - or - The Recruiting Sargeant Enlisting John Bull, Into the Revolution Service
1791
237
James Gillray, 1756–1815, British
Sin, Death, and the Devil
1792
238
James Gillray, 1756–1815, British
French Liberty - British Slavery
1792
239
James Gillray, 1756–1815, British
Un Petit Souper, a La Parisienne; - or - A Family of Sans-Culotts Refreshing, After the Fatigues of the Day
1792
240
James Gillray, 1756–1815, British
Louis XVI Taking Leave of His Wife and Family
1793
241
James Gillray, 1756–1815, British
The Royal Joke, - or - Black Jades Delight, A Hint For a New Reform
1788
242
James Gillray, 1756–1815, British
Monstrous Craws, At a New Coalition Feast
1787
243
James Gillray, 1756–1815, British
Ancient Music
1787
244
James Gillray, 1756–1815, British
French Democrats Surprizing the Royal-Runaways
1791
245
James Gillray, 1756–1815, British
A Duet. - Turn Fair Clora, Turn Ah Cruel, Turn Again
1792
246
James Gillray, 1756–1815, British
The Sleep-Walker
1795
247
James Gillray, 1756–1815, British
The Finishing Touch
1791
248
James Gillray, 1756–1815, British
The Bridal-Night
1797
249
James Gillray, 1756–1815, British
The Republican Rattle-Snake Fascinating the Bedford-Squirrel ---
1795
250
James Gillray, 1756–1815, British
Retribution; - Tarring and Feathering; - or - The Patriots Revenge, - Nay You'll Stop Our Mouths, Beware Your Own
1795
251
James Gillray, 1756–1815, British
Cockney-Sportsmen marking game
1800
252
James Gillray, 1756–1815, British
A Kick at the Broad-Bottoms! - i.e.- Emancipation of "All the Talents"
1807
253
James Gillray, 1756–1815, British
The Valley of the Shadow of Death
1808
254
James Gillray, 1756–1815, British
Weird Sisters; Ministers of Darkness; Minions of the Moon (Thurlow, Pitt, and Dundas)
1791
255
James Gillray, 1756–1815, British
Squire Thomas Just Arriv'd, Touch Me Not! I'm Still a Maid
1783
256
James Gillray, 1756–1815, British
Search-Night;- or - State-Watchmen, Mistaking Honest-Men for Conspirators - Vide, State Arrests
1798
257
James Gillray, 1756–1815, British
The Caneing in Conduit Street - Dedicated to the Flag Officers of the British Navy
1796
258
Thomas Rowlandson, 1756–1827, British
Filial Piety
1788
259
James Gillray, 1756–1815, British
To Be Paid For - The Dog Tax
1796
260
James Gillray, 1756–1815, British
No Flower that Blows, Is Like this Rose
1796
261
James Gillray, 1756–1815, British
Parliamentary-Reform, - or - Opposition-Rats, Leaving the House They Had Undermined
1797
262
James Gillray, 1756–1815, British
United Irishmen Upon Duty
1798
263
James Gillray, 1756–1815, British
Un Diplomatique, Settl'ing Affairs at Stevens's (Baron Haslang, Bavarian Minister)
1794
264
James Gillray, 1756–1815, British
Nightly Visitors, at St. Ann's Hill; In Glided Edward's Pale-Eye'd Ghost, and Stood at Carlo's Feet
1798
265
James Gillray, 1756–1815, British
Substitutes for Bread; - or - Right Honorables, Saving the Loaves and Dividing the Fishes
1795
266
James Gillray, 1756–1815, British
Evacuation Before Resignation
1782
267
James Gillray, 1756–1815, British
French Generals Retiring, on Account of their Health; - with Lepaux Presiding in the Directorial Dispensary
1799
268
James Gillray, 1756–1815, British
Exhibition of a Democratic Transparency,-with its Effect upon Patriotic Feelings: Representing, the Secret-Committee throwing a Light upon the Dark Sketches of a Revolution found among the Papers of the Jacobin Societies lately apprehended..
1799
269
James Gillray, 1756–1815, British
New Morality; - or - The Promis'd Installment of the High-Priest of the Theophilanthropes, - with the Homage of Leviathan and his Suite
1798
270
James Gillray, 1756–1815, British
Two Pair of Portraits; - Presented to all the Unbiassed Electors of Great Britain, by John Horne Tooke _____
1798
271
James Gillray, 1756–1815, British
Elegance - Democratique, - A Sketch Found Near High-Wycombe; - Whenever I Wish to Form a Proper,- Estimate - of a Mans Mind, I Observe his Manners and his Dress. --- Lord Chesterfield,
1799
272
James Gillray, 1756–1815, British
A Hackney Meeting
1796
273
James Gillray, 1756–1815, British
A Portrait ------------
1799
274
James Gillray, 1756–1815, British
The General of Patriotism, - or -The Bloomsbury Farmer, Planting Bedfordshire Wheat
1796
275
James Gillray, 1756–1815, British
The Grand-Signior Retiring
1796
276
James Gillray, 1756–1815, British
Democratic Leveling; - Alliance a la Francoise; - or - The Union of the Coronet and Clyster-Pipe
1796
277
James Gillray, 1756–1815, British
Fashionable - Jockeyship
1796
278
James Gillray, 1756–1815, British
Pity The Sorrows of a Poor Old Man, Vide, Scene in Bloomsbury Square
1796
279
James Gillray, 1756–1815, British
Glorious Reception of the Ambassador of Peace, on His Entry Into Paris
1796
280
James Gillray, 1756–1815, British
Opening of the Budget; - or - John Bull Giving His Breeches to Save His Bacon
1796
281
James Gillray, 1756–1815, British
Hint to Modern Sculptors, as an Ornament to a Future Square ---
1796
282
James Gillray, 1756–1815, British
The Royal Whim, or the Crouch-a-la Mode: A New Dance to The Old Tune. Comus, Euphrosyne, and The Bacchanalian Crew. ---Dedicated to Mr. Kelly, by Soliloquy Whistlepipe
1792
283
James Gillray, 1756–1815, British
Patience on a Monument
1791
284
Print made by James Gillray, 1756–1815, British
The Prince of Wales
1802
285
James Gillray, 1756–1815, British
A Uniform Whig ---
1791
286
James Gillray, 1756–1815, British
A Sun Setting in a Fog, With The Old Hanover Hack Descending
1783
287
James Gillray, 1756–1815, British
A Witch, Upon a Mount's Edge - Vide: Fuzelli
1791
288
James Gillray, 1756–1815, British
A Natural Crop; - Alias - A Norfolk Dumpling
1791
289
James Gillray, 1756–1815, British
Which is the Better Man or The Pot Calls the Kettle Blacka-e
1786
290
James Gillray, 1756–1815, British
The April Fool or The Follies of a Night ---
1786
291
James Gillray, 1756–1815, British
Committee of Grievances and Apprehensions
1792
292
James Gillray, 1756–1815, British
The Fall of the Wolsey of the Woolsack
1792
293
James Gillray, 1756–1815, British
The Friendly Agent
1787
294
James Gillray, 1756–1815, British
A New Administration, or - The State Quacks Administring
1783
295
James Gillray, 1756–1815, British
The Bubbles of Opposition
1788
296
James Gillray, 1756–1815, British
A Warm Birth for the Old Administration -----
1783
297
James Gillray, 1756–1815, British
The Seige of Blenheim, - or - The New System of Gunning, Discovered -- Vide - A Bold Stroke for a Husband-Dedicated to the Duke of A.-
1791
298
James Gillray, 1756–1815, British
John Bull Triumphant
1780
299
James Gillray, 1756–1815, British
The Triumphant Britons
1780
300
James Gillray, 1756–1815, British
A Copper Countenance, Selling by Private Contract, The Property of a Noble Lord Out of Office Having No Further Use for It..