Songs of Innocence, Plate 30, "The Little Black Boy" (Bentley 10)
1789
78
Print made by William Blake, 1757–1827
Pity
ca. 1795
79
Print made by William Blake, 1757–1827
Young's Night Thoughts, Page 23, "We censure nature for a span too short"
ca. 1797
80
James Northcote, 1746–1831
Study for Burying the Royal Children
ca. 1790
81
Print made by Henry William Bunbury, 1750–1811
The Battle of the Cataplasm
between 1773 and 1817
82
Robert Smirke, 1752–1845
Falstaff at Herne's Oak
1821
83
Print made by Benjamin Fawcett, 1808–1893
Scene Illustration: Milton's 'L'Allegro'
between 1860 and 1885
84
Sir John Gilbert, 1817–1897
Apotheosis of Shakespeare's Characters
1871
85
Julius Caesar Ibbetson, 1759–1817
Title page for "The Guardian"
undated
86
Print made by Henry Thomas Alken, 1785–1851
The Infant
1824
87
Print made by Henry Thomas Alken, 1785–1851
The School-Boy
1824
88
Richard Westall, 1765–1836
Greatheart's Battle with Grim
undated
89
Print made by Luigi Schiavonetti, 1765–1810
The Meeting of a Family in Heaven
1808, published 1813
90
Print made by Luigi Schiavonetti, 1765–1810
The Descent of Man into the Vale of Death
1808, published 1813
91
Print made by Thomas Gaugain, 1748–1812
Diligence and Dissipation: The Wanton Dying in Poverty and Disease Visited by the Modest Girl (Plate 9)
1797
92
Print made by William Skelton, 1763–1848
Richard III: Act IV, Scene III, Tower of London
1795
93
Johann Jacobus Haid, 1704–1767
Mr. Garrick in "The Farmer's Return"
1766
94
Robert Smirke, 1752–1845
Illustration for Shakespeare's " A Winter's Tale" or '"Cymbeline"
undated
95
Print made by George Cruikshank, 1792–1878
Mr. Wood Offers to Adopt Little Jack Sheppard
1835
96
Print made by Robert Thew, 1758–1802
King Richard III: Act III, Scene I (The Meeting of Edward V and His Brother, Richard, Duke of York)
1789
97
Carington Bowles, 1724–1793
Twelve Illustrations of Robinson Crusoe
1783
98
Print made by James Gillray, 1756–1815
Shakespeare Sacrificed; or, The Offering to Avarice
1789
99
Print made by Guillaume Philippe Benoist, 1725–ca. 1770
Pamela with the Children and Miss Goodwin to whome she is telling her nursery tales. This last Piece leaves her in full possession of the peaceable fruits of her Virtue long after having surmounted all the difficulties it had been exposed to