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Effects of the Dog Tax, 19 April 1796

 Item — Box: LF104/4 Box 1
Reference code: LF104/4/11

Scope and Contents

By Isaac Cruikshank. Ministerial dogs, their collars inscribed 'GR', stand under a gibbet from which dangle three dogs wearing bonnets-rouges (these have been coloured blue and buff). All have human faces. The dogs on the gibbet, whose cross-piece is inscribed 'Tria juncta in uno', are Sheridan (left), Fox (with a fox's brush), and Stanhope (right) whose back is to the other two. Above is the inscription 'Not worth the tax'. Below the others is the inscription 'Good dogs paid for'. On the extreme left is Pitt, his profile grossly caricatured, who is chained to the '[T]reasury' kennel, from which he is looking. Portland looks up at the victims, next is Loughborough wearing his Chancellor's wig, and Burke who looks defiant. Facing him is Grenville and on the extreme right is Dundas, his fore-paws on the post of the gibbet looking up. Beside the gibbet is a large thistle. Beneath the title:

'Budgets & Loans so thick we see And Taxes press so hard Sir That Poor John Bull can't pay the Fee For Dogs his only Guard And tho' near empty Johnnys purse Yet cruel 'tis to say sir For R------l [Royal] Dogs which are his curse Poor Johnny's made to pay Sir' 19 April 1796. Hand-coloured etching. Description from the British Museum.

Dates

  • Creation: 19 April 1796

Conditions Governing Access

Available by appointment in our Reading Room

Extent

1 Item(s)

Language of Materials

English

Repository Details

Part of the Special Collections and Archives Repository

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University of Sheffield
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