Part 35 (1/2)
”The Looking Gla.s.s” (a series of political and other caricatures, in which he was a.s.sisted by William Heath). 1830-1836.
”Sycophant Saints and Sabbath Sinners.” Circa 1832.
[_With Isaac Robert Cruikshank._] ”Cruikshank at Home,” and ”The Odd Volume.” 1836.
”The Omnibus” (a series of humorous etchings on copper); and ”The Heiress” (six plates, each consisting of about five subjects).
Upwards of three hundred designs on wood for ”Figaro in London.”
1831-1836.
”Valpurgis; or, the Devil's Festival.” Four woodcuts. (Kidd.) 1831.
”The Extraordinary Black Book” (an exposition of the incomes of the aristocracy, Church, civil list, list of sinecurists, etc.), one caricature plate. 1831.
”The Comic Magazine.” 1831-1834.
”Maxims and Hints for an Angler” (twelve beautifully-finished drawings on stone).
”The Schoolmaster Abroad” (aimed at Lord Brougham's educational movement).
”New Readings by Old Authors” (a small lithographic series comprising upwards of three hundred plates, the subjects being suggested by readings in Shakespeare, Schiller's ”William Tell,” and Byron's ”Giaour.”)
Several hundred ill.u.s.trations for Maddeley, the publisher.
The ”Humorous Sketches”; ”Hood's Comic Almanack,” 1836 (thirteen woodcuts); ”Squib Annual of Poetry, Politics, and Personalities” (twelve designs); [_with Cruikshank_] ”Sayings worth Hearing, and Secrets worth Knowing”; ”Terrific Penny Magazine”; T. K. Hervey's ”Book of Christmas,”
1836; the early plates to ”Pickwick”; some of the plates to the ”Pocket Magazine” (Robins' series), eleven vols., etc., etc.
APPENDIX III.
_SOME OF THE ILl.u.s.tRATED WORK OF JOHN LEECH._
1835. ”Etchings and Sketchings,” by A. Pen, Esq.
1837. ”Jack Brag,” by Theodore Hook.
1840. ”The Comic Latin Grammar,” by Paul Prendergast. (Percival Leigh.) Plates and cuts.
”The Comic English Grammar,” by Gilbert a Beckett. Fifty ill.u.s.trations.
”The Fiddle-Faddle Fas.h.i.+on Book,” by Percival Leigh. Four coloured plates.
[_With Hablot Knight Browne and another._] ”The London Magazine, Charivari, and Courrier des Dames.”
”Bentley's Miscellany,” 1840 to 1849, containing etchings to the ”Ingoldsby Legends,” ”Stanley Thorn,” ”Richard Savage,” ”Adventures of Mr. Ledbury,” ”Fortunes of the Scattergood Family,” ”Marchioness of Brinvilliers,” ”Brian O'Linn,” etc., etc.
1841. ”The Children of the Mobility,” seven lithographs in a wrapper.
”Written Caricatures,” by C. C. Pepper (pseud.).