350 
corner, is a bifhop, holding a book in- 
feribed The Holy Bible; and near hima 
flas, on which is written, For the Protefiaut 
relizion, aud the liberty of England. In 
the back ground is part of a fhip, boats 
Isnding troops, &c. &c. and ona hill in 
the diftance are an immen‘e crowd of fpec- 
tators,{bouting welcome to their great de- 
fiverer. There are parts of this print that 
are good, but it does not form a whele, 
and the platform is confufed, fo as to ap- 
pear hke a great table. It would have had 
a better effect if the plate had been broader, 
for the heads of the ficures come too near’ 
the top of the print. It is well engraved 
im lines 
You Cant Spell! You Can't Write !—companion 
prints. ‘Painted by W. Millar. — Exgraved 
_. dy R. Cooper. Publifhed by Teflolint, 735 
Corzbill, Price al. 11s. 64, 
Thefe are very pretty defiens of the 
School of Bartolozzi, and moft admirably 
engraved, 
Mifcellaneous Britifo Scenery. 
No. I. Plate iff, View of \Oakhampton. Cafiles 
No. If. Ivy Bridge, Devon. Nos 
§TE. View of Berry Pomeroy Cafil, Devon 
vo. IV. View near Cakbampton, Dewon, Frou 
dofigns by Mr. Walmefley. Price 4].4s. thefet. 
Or Mir. Walmefley’s defigns we have 
booken in a former Retrofpeé&t. The four 
preceding prints are ina fimflar ftyle, dif- 
tinguifhed by a good tafte, and, we dare 
fay, accurate reprefentations of the places 
€elineated: They are very well engraved 
in acgua tint, two offthem by Haffell, and 
two by Caitwrigit. 
Boncparte. Painted by Northeste. Engraved 
by S. BW. Reynolds. Publifhed by W. Feffries, 
Claphan-read,; Offeber 15th, 180¥. Pricey 
zz ca'curs, 31. 3s. plain, 11, 118. 6d. 
It is defisnedina grand ftyle, but the 
horfe has a mere than accidental refem- 
blance to fome-of thole painted by Ru- 
bens; and we have previovily feen one of 
the fame prancing family,in the piéiure 
of the Triumphai Entry of Henry IV. in 
the Shaxefpeare’ Gallery. “Fhe head of 
Bonaparte borders upon the caricature ; 
the deign, though {pirited, is not conceived 
x The plain im- 
efficns haveavery fuperior effect to thofe 
atare coloured. 
lely Fanily. Painted by R. Wefiall, R.A. 
Engraved by §. W, Reynolds. Dedicated to the 
Counte/s of Re 
Syn, and publifbed by Feffries. 
Price, in colours, 31. 35. 
This deSgn is conceived with the ufual 
— + 
Retrofped? of the Fine Arts. 
[Nov. 1, 
delicacy of Weftall’s delineations: the fi- 
gure of the Virgin is fimple, elegant, and 
fingularly beautijul; and the furrounding. 
fcenery enchanting. They are foid only 
in colours. ; 
Fox-hunting, The Check. Defigned by G: Moro 
land, Engraved and publijked by E. Bell, 
No. 45, Ijlington-road, near Sadler’s Wells, 
Goizg into Cover. The fame painter and eis 
raver, : 
The two firft prints of this ets were 
publithed fome time ago, and noticed in a 
former Retrofpect. Both of thefe, efpeci- 
ally the firft, are defigned and engraved in 
a very good ftyle. The horfes, dogs and 
figures are fpirited and~ natural; and in 
that of the Check, particularly, the fky is 
light and airy, the fore-ground rich, and 
the foliage of the old tree, &c. fuperior 
any thing we have often feen in a mez- 
tinto, : 
A few .copies of Shakefpeare’s Seu 
Ages, cefigned by S:othard, and engraved — 
by Bromley, and publifhed by Symonds, 
in Paternofter-row, are now taken off in 
colours, which have an effect nearly. equal 
to the original drawings, price, 3l. 
The very capital plate, engrayed by 
Bromley, from Loutherbourg’s Valen- 
clenwes, is printing with all the expedition 
of which fo large and capital a print will 
admit, and will be ready for delivery to 
the fubferibers, &c. in the early part of the 
winter. -From the very fuperior ffyle in 
which it is defigned and engraved, this 
print will hold a very high clafs m the 
arts; and from there being twenty-eight 
portraits, will bea valuable addition to the 
cabinets of thofe who wifh to poffefs por- 
traits of the great characters ef their own 
day. A lift of their names will be given 
in a future Retrofpect. 
~ 
Confidering the {plendour with which . 
the apartments of the nobility and gentry 
of this country are furnifhed, ‘it has often 
been thought fingular, that we fhould never 
have had any good beok of defigns of fur- 
niture, and the interior decorations of 
houfes. Such a work enables the gentle- 
‘man and the artifan to underftand each 
-other, and will be extremely ufeful te each 
“and fuch a work Ackerman, of the Strand, 
has juft publifhed. It is printed by Dulaz, 
both in French and Enghith, and contains 
about thirty engravings of the moft fuperb 
and elegant decorations, with which the 
various apartments of a capital manfion 
can be furnifhed. The title is, Defgns, 
Sor Architects, Uphalfierers, Cabinet-makers, 
Ge. fuch as Breakfafi, Dining and Drawa 
ange 
4 
