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'If musick's charms can hearts enthral', 1730.Artist: William Hogarth
'If musick's charms can hearts enthral, this consort's sure above 'em all. How sweet the sound where cats and bears, with brutish noise offend our ears, just so the foreign singers move, rather contempt than gain our love: were such discouraged we should find, musick at home to charm the mind', 1730. Illustration from Social Caricature in the Eighteenth Century ... With over two hundred illustrations by George Paston [pseudonym of Emily Morse Symonds], (London, 1905).
Unique Identifier
AR950188
Type
Image
Purpose
Public
Size
4759px × 3669px
Photo Credit
HIP / Art Resource, NY
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Tags
18th century
ANIMAL
ARTS
B&W
B/W
Black & White
Black and white
Britain
British
cacophony
concept
E
E Heemskirck
eighteenth century
Emily Morse
Emily Morse Symonds
GEORGE
George Paston
HARMONY
Heemskirck
Hogarth
JOB
Literature
Monochrome
music
Noise
OCCUPATION
Paston
performance
Performer
Poetry
Print Collector6
PROFESSION
Singer
Singing
stage
Symonds
The Print Collector
Theater
W Hogarth
WILLIAM
WILLIAM HOGARTH