Read Royal Romances: Sex, Scandal, and Monarchy Online
Authors: Kristin Flieger Samuelian
Tags: #Europe, #Modern (16th-21st Centuries), #England, #0230616305, #18th Century, #2010, #Palgrave Macmillan, #History
the gift of the Queen consort. The print suggests that Wood hoped
to be made Warden of St. Catherine’s in return for his support of the
Queen.
12. The attribution “Gay” suggests that the verse is drawn from John
Gay’s
Fables
, but it was more likely written by Lane for the engraving.
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N o t e s
223
It is in the style of Gay’s verse, and cats and monkeys feature often in
the
Fables
, but these four lines do not appear in Gay.
13. The punctuation appears in Gillray’s title but not in Lane’s.
14. She is washing out her “last shift” in the picture, but the title also
suggests the kind of workaday changeover that might account for her
weary stance.
15. Gillray reinforces the association of Lady Hamilton with prostitution
with the relics at her feet. Presumably from her husband’s collection
of antiquities, they include statues of Priapus, Messalina, Venus, and
a satyr.
16. The National Library of Scotland lists several different versions of
“The Blue Bells of Scotland” throughout the later eighteenth and
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nineteenth centuries. The one anthologized in the
Scots Musical
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Museum
in 1803 begins “O where and O where does your highland
laddie dwell; / He dwells in merry Scotland where the blue bells
sweetly smell.” In other broadsides the second line is often some ver-
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sion of “He’s gone to fight the French, for George upon the Throne”
(“The Blue Bells of Scotland”). My thanks to Clare Simmons for
pointing out the transmogrification of references in these prints,
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from laddie/soldier to sailor to courier.
17. Robert Patten briefly discusses the relationship between the two
sitetsbib
prints in his biography of Cruikshank (233–34).
18. It would have cost a good deal more to purchase than any of the indi-
vidual prints, which could have been bought colored for as much as
two shillings or uncolored for as little as sixpence (Tamara Hunt 698).
A bound volume like this, on the other hand, would have been much
more expensive. William St. Clair points out that “in 1812, a bound
copy of [
Childe Harold
] in quarto cost about half the weekly income
of a gentleman” (
The Reading Nation in the Romantic Period
195).
19. Tamara Hunt points out that the need for a print to be current often
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meant that production was rushed: “it was more important for a cari-
cature to be timely rather than a production of high artistic quality”
.palgra
(699).
20. As Lockhart’s sketch suggests, discussion of Byron’s image focused
om www
on his face as an index, a “welcome adjunct to reading” his poetry
(Mole, “Ways of Seeing Byron” 69): the true cast of Byronic melan-
choly. The pseudo-miniatures of the tête-à-têtes in the eighteenth
century accomplished the same thing with Robinson’s image.
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21. Toulalan lists several references to posture girls in seventeenth- and
Cop
eighteenth-century pornographic texts, suggesting that “the reveal-
ing of the genitals to excite a client seems to have been a standard
practice” (186–87). Robinson reinforces this association in the sketch
when she comments that Tarleton “has often been a mere spectator,
as he is now, of such follies” (187).
22. “It is this overweening, aggravated, intolerable sense of swelling
pride and ungovernable self-will, that so often drives them mad; as
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N o t e s
it is their blind fatuity and insensibility to all beyond themselves,
that, transmitted through successive generations and confirmed by
regal intermarriages, in time makes them idiots” (“On the Regal
Character” 340).
23. The entire cost of William’s coronation was just over 30,000 pounds
(Ziegler 193). Victoria’s cost about 70,000 pounds (Hibbert,
Queen
Victoria
71), while George IV’s cost over three times as much.
Cumming lists the total expenditure for his coronation as just over
238,000 pounds, of which 100,000 pounds were paid by Parliament
and the rest came from France under the peace treaty (42).
24. William’s biographer Philip Ziegler cites the “at times almost fran-
tic” (152) avoidance of ceremony that characterized his brief reign.
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He quotes the Duke of Wellington’s observation that “This is not
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a new reign, it is a new dynasty” and adds that it would be “more
accurate to say that it was not a new king, it was a new concept of
monarchy” (154–55).
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25. Plunkett points out that “[a]ttacks and commentary upon the nine-
teenth-century monarchy as an institution have to be continually set
against the much larger number of column inches engendered by the
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Queen’s engagements” (14).
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