The Thames as a gateway to foreign trade routes. Etching by J. Barry, 1791.
- Barry, James, 1741-1806.
- Date:
- May 1 1791
- Reference:
- 12117i
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- Online
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A river god representing the River Thames sits on a chariot, centre, accompanied by nereids in the water. Also standing in the water at the front of the chariot is Captain Cook, behind him are Sir Francis Drake and Sir Walter Raleigh, and to right is a man identified in the British Museum catalogue (and elsewhere) as Dr Charles Burney, the scholar and composer of music. Cook, Raleigh and Burney are clothed. Left, figures representing Europe, Africa, America and Asia (but not Australia). Above, Hermes or Mercury holding the caduceus in his right hand and trumpeting the fame of the Thames with a Roman tuba (or similar) held in his left hand
Wood, loc. cit., identifies the figures in the water as Drake, Raleigh, Sebastian Cabot, Captain Cook and Burney, the last being included as a representative of music; Burney's inclusion is described in the Microcosm of London (1809) as "a whim equally absurd and incomprehensible"
Hudson and Luckhurst, loc. cit., call the painting "Commerce, or the triumph of the Thames", and quote an unattributed comment on Burney's depiction in the water: "It irks me to see my good friend Dr Burney paddling in a horse pond with a bevy of naked wenches" (a sightly different wording is given in In Elysium, op. cit., p. 23)
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