A procession of English reformers and radicals as Jacobins pay tribute to Larevellière-Lépeaux, Priestley and Bedford, as Leviathan, among them. Paine is depicted as a weeping crocodile wearing stays and holding his Defense of the 18 Fructidor.; George: 9240 Gimbel: 271. Plate created to accompany the Anti-Jacobin Review and Magazine and the poem New Morality.by Canning, George, 1770-1827.
Thomas Paine, as stay maker, tightens Britannia's "Parisian" stay-laces. He wears a liberty cap with tricolor cockade and his measuring tape is inscribed "Rights of Man".; George: 8287, Gimbel: 244
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
A satirical depiction of the January 23rd opening of Parliament. William Pitt is depicted as a messenger riding a donkey, bearing the Treaty of Commerce with France and leading a group advancing to meet Charles James Fox and his supporters. Fox is riding a cannon from which a blast inscribed "Voice of the People" issues. George III is visible inside the state coach in the background. ; George vol. 6, no. 7132.
Possible artist, John Boyne.
Russell thrusts documents into a blazing hell-mouth, agape in the House of Commons. A few figures are seen inside it, including Cobbett, peering though a gridiron, and Paine as a skeleton wearing a liberty cap.; George: 16643, Gimbel: 276
French soldiers attack the tapestry depicting the defeat of the Spanish Armada in the House of Lords.; George: 9181 Gimbel: 252. A copy of a James Gillray print, the second in a series of four (George 9180-83) based on descriptions by Sir John Darymple.
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
A man walks absent-mindedly into a shallow pond, a paper inscribed Rights of Man projecting from his pocket. [Gimbel 246]; 2 copies, variations in color. George v. 6, No. 8212.
Paine, Sheridan and Whitbread imagined as the arsonists responsible for a fire started in the House of Commons by a hidden pair of burning breeches. Paine, as a sans-culotte, sets fire to his own straw filled breeches. ; George: 8087 Gimbel: 236. Four copies, variations in color.
An electoral procession for Paull, riding on Burdett, who is depicted as a goose. ; George: 10608, Gimbel: 258. Two copies, variations in color. The figure of Bosville, distributing coins to the crowd, is identified by Gimbel as representative of Thomas Paine.
In a parody of Fuseli's Nightmare, John Bull is haunted in his sleep by various specters, one of which is a corpse-like figure leaning on a book by Paine.; George:15497 Gimbel: 275
A group of figures stands in front of a demonstrating crowd. One is selling broadsides and the other Paine's Rights of Man. His advertising placard is topped by a liberty cap and his purse is inscribed: "The Reform Budget".; George: 16839 , Gimbel: 234. hand-colored. Much of the original text at bottom has been trimmed off.
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
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
A group of radical reformers, politicians and publishers visiting with their friends and associates inside Newgate prison, all identified in the key below One of the figures portrayed is William Holland, the publisher of the original print, who was imprisoned for selling pamphlets by Thomas Paine. ; George: 8342. Negative and positive photostats.