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4 Frontispiece to Reflections on the French Revolution

Attributed to Frederick George Byron (1764 ā€“ 1792)

Frontispiece to Reflections on the French Revolution, 1790

Etching with hand-colouring

Published by William Holland, No. 50 Oxford Street, London, 2nd November 1790

Edmund Burkeā€™s was published on 1st November 1790 and provoked an extraordinary number of responses including this print that was produced the very next day. Print publishers in England such as , who published this caricature, and many others of the period, were eager to exploit the sensational events, especially those occurring in England. In this caricature, recently attributed to , Edmund Burke is represented kneeling before Marie Antoinette, Queen of France. Dressed in robes reminiscent of a Greek goddess and standing upon a cloud, Marie Antoinette is the subject of Burkeā€™s enraptured gaze.

Burke is here ridiculed for the admiration he displayed for Marie Antoinette in Reflections on the Revolution in France. The caricature picks out the famous passage, beginning, ā€˜It is now sixteen years since I saw the Queen of Franceā€™ and ends with ā€˜I thought ten thousand swords must have leaped from their scabbards to avenge even a look that threatened her with insult ā€“ But the age of Chivalry is gone.ā€™ Several months prior to its publication, Burke had sent a draft to , a British Statesman and Pamphleteer, who said of this passage, ā€œall that you say of the Queen is pure foppery.ā€ Caricaturists wishing to sway people against Burke and his opinions on the Revolution were quick to mock the praise lavished by him on the Queen.

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