Universitätsbibliothek HeidelbergUniversitätsbibliothek Heidelberg
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Trusler, John; Hogarth, J.; Nichols, John; Hogarth, William [Ill.]; Hogarth, J. [Oth.]; Nichols, John [Oth.]
The Works Of William Hogarth In A Series Of Engravings: With Descriptions And A Cmment On Their Moral Tendency — London: Published By Jones And Co., 1833

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https://doi.org/10.11588/diglit.61480#0045
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TASTE IN HIGH LIFE

IN THE YEAR 1742.

The picture from which this print was copied, Hogarth painted by the order of
Miss Edwards, a woman of large fortune, who having been laughed at for some sin-
gularities in her manners, requested the artist to recriminate on her opponents, and
paid him sixty guineas for his production.
It is professedly intended to ridicule the reigning fashions of high life, in the year
1742: to do this, the painter has brought into one group, an old beau and an old lady
of the Chesterfield school, a fashionable young lady, a little black boy, and a full-
dressed monkey. The old lady, with a most affected air, poises, between her finger
and thumb, a small tea-cup, with the beauties of which she appears to be highly
enamoured.
The gentleman, gazing with vacant wonder at that and the companion saucer
which he holds in his hand, joins in admiration ofits astonishing beauties!
" Each varied colour of the brightest hue,
The green, the red, the yellow, and the blue,
In every part their dazzled eyes behold,
Here streak'd with silver—there enrich'd with gold."
This gentleman is said to be intended for Lord Portmore, in the habit he first ap
peared at Court, on his return from France. The cane dangling from his wrist, large
muff, long queue, black stock, feathered chapeau, and shoes, give him the air of
" An old and finish'd fop,
All cork at heel, and feather all at top."
The old lady's habit, formed of stiff brocade, gives her the appearance of a squa,
pyramid, with a grotesque head at the top of it. The young one is fondling a little
black boy, who on his part is playing with a petite pagoda. This miniature Othello
has been said to be intended for the late Ignatius Sancho, whose talents and virtues
10.
 
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