Robert Seymour (illustrator) - Artworks and Book Illustrations

Artworks and Book Illustrations

  • Tasso’s Jerusalem Delivered. (Royal Academy; 1821):
  • Figaro in London. (300 illustrations):
  • Bells Life in London:
  • Hoods Comic Almanacs:
  • The Looking Glass. (1830–36):
  • The History of Enfield. (2 vols; 1823):
  • Public Characters of all Nations. (3 vols; 1823):
  • Le Diable boiteux(fr). (1824):
  • My Uncle Timothy. (1825):
  • Snatches from Oblivion:
  • The March of Intellect. (1829):
  • W.A.R: a Masque.
  • Vagaries in the Quest of the Wild and Wonderful:
  • The Heiress:
  • The Omnibus:
  • Seymour’s Sporting Sketches:
  • The Book of Christmas.(36 designs):
  • New Readings. (1830–35):
  • Journal of a Landsman from Portsmouth to Lisbon. (1831):
  • Maxims and Hints for an Angler. (1833):
  • The Comic Album. (The Bloomsbury Christening; Dickens) (1834):
  • The Squib Annual of Poetry, Politics, and Personalities. (1835–36):
  • Humorous Sketches. (1834–36):
  • Sketches by Seymour. (1834–36):
  • Library of Fiction:
  • The Nimrod Club. (1835–36):
  • The Posthumous Papers of the Pickwick Club. (1836):

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Famous quotes containing the words artworks and/or book:

    It is with artworks as it is with wine: it is much better when we do not need either one, when we stick with water, and when out of our own inner fire, the inner sweetness of our own soul, we turn the water over and over again into wine ourselves.
    Friedrich Nietzsche (1844–1900)

    I think, for the rest of my life, I shall refrain from looking up things. It is the most ravenous time-snatcher I know. You pull one book from the shelf, which carries a hint or a reference that sends you posthaste to another book, and that to successive others. It is incredible, the number of books you hopefully open and disappointedly close, only to take down another with the same result.
    Carolyn Wells (1862–1942)