Fox, as Cromwell, waves a whip and drives the allied Kings in the direction of a sign inscribed: "To Equality or Annihilation" while an allegorical America, as "Indian Queen" with liberty cap and pole, looks on.; Gimbel: 237
The five Directors, dressed in official costume of red capes and plumed caps, contemplate suicide upon receiving news of a new British defeat. Among the papers scattered on the table and floor are a caricature of Fox and a paper inscribed "Tom Payne".; Gimbel: 266
A group of Fox supporters with liberty caps pulled over their eyes. A row of portraits on the wall includes Thomas Paine.; George 9262, negative and positive photostats
Napoleon commands a group of ministers and their supporters, depicted as conscripts in training while Fox, wearing a liberty cap, beats a drum.; George: 10596
Burke, Fox and North argue and gesticulate towards the Speaker in the House of Commons. A dog, partly covered by a scroll, barks.; George: 6188. A companion to George: 6187
Tooke paints portraits of Fox and Pitt in a studio, a reference to a similarly titled pamphlet he had recently published. ; Gimbel: 293 "Universal suffrage was one of Paine's first principles" [Gimbel]. Copy after print James Gillray published by John Wright, 1798-12-01 (see George: 9270)
King George drives away in a coach, leaving the "Old House" in the hands of the "robbers", or members of the Coalition. Among them is Fox, depicted as a fox seated on a stone.; George: 6384
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.
Four figures dance around a cauldron before the anniversary of the fall of the Bastille. Joseph Priestly is holding Rights of Man and invoking the spirit of Thomas Paine.; George 7890, Gimbel 232, two color variations
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
Fox, as a serpent coiled around the trunk of a liberty cap topped apple tree, attempts to lure John Bull with an apple labeled: "Reform". Among the apples of the "Opposition" tree is one called "Age of Reason" and the trunk is also inscribed "Rights of Man". ; Gimbel: 254. Plate V in the German journal London und Paris, I, 1798. Reduced reproduction after the Gillray print published by Hannah Humphrey on 1789-05-23 (see George: 9214)
Fox is applying whitewash to Grattan and O'Connor while his supporters, including Sheridan, are engaged in preparing the mixture.; George: 9343 The printmaker may be Sansom or Charles William.
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
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
Fox, assisted by Sheridan and a demon-riding Priestley, prepares to strike a symbol-laden tree with an ax inscribed "Rights of Man". An open copy of Rights of Man sits among other books nearby. The scene is seen through a pair of spectacles on which portraits of Fox and Sheridan are engraved. ; George: 7858 Gimbel: 229 Folder includes the August 29, 1791 issue of the Gazette of the United States, vol. III, no. 34