Fox, holding Paine's Rights of Man and Sheridan officiate the marriage between Lady Lucy Stanhope and an apothecary composed of medical implements. Charles Stanhope and the apothecary are depicted as sans-culottes.; George: 8787, Gimbel: 250
Cobbett leads a procession in protest of the Convention of Cintra. He is cheered by a frenzied mob and sits in a "political hog trough", filled with issues of his Weekly Political Register.; George: 11047
Mock heraldry for Napoleon's France. An ape and a tiger support an oval containing a guillotine. The ape is seated on volumes by Rousseau, Voltaire and a pamphlet by Paine.; George 8834, Gimbel 251
Paine sleeps on a bed of straw, surrounded by parodies of his works, watched over by Fox and Priestley as guardian angels, and dreams of his trial. A demon holding a fiddle and sheet music inscribed "Ca ira" flees through the window.; George: 8137, Gimbel: 240. Five copies, variations in color.
James Paull and his petition, having arrived in the House of Commons on the back of Burdett, "the green goose from Brentford", is strongly rebuked by the Speaker. His supporters, including Cobbett, stand nearby while Tooke and Bosville start to move away. ; George: 10708, Gimbel: 260
Self-portrait by Gillray. Among his prints, visible on the wall behind him is "The Rights of Man", his caricature of Thomas Paine. (see Paine 75 G41r).; George: 9569. Negative and positive photostats.
Burdett, liberty cap in hand, presides over a group of radical reformers that includes Cobbett and Tooke who are burning acts of Parliament. In the background, a mob destroys the Parliament building.; George: 11338
Burdett practices a dramatic reading of a speech written by Tooke on a scroll held by Fox and Sheridan. "Tom Paine" is among the busts seen in the background.; George: 9739, Gimbel: 257, 2 copies
Avarice is illustrated by the King and Queen hugging bags of money, drunkenness by an inebriated Prince of Wales, gambling by the Duke of York at a gaming table, and debauchery by the Duke of Clarence and Mrs. Jordan embracing.; George: 8095, Gimbel: 238. "A satire on the Royal Proclamation of 21 May, which was directed chiefly against Paine's writings" [Gimbel].