A futuristic vision: the advance of technology leads to rapid transport, sophisticated tastes among the masses, mechanization, and extravagant building projects. Coloured etching by W. Heath, 1829.

  • Heath, William, 1795-1840.
Date:
[ca. May 1829]
Reference:
37252i
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view A futuristic vision: the advance of technology leads to rapid transport, sophisticated tastes among the masses, mechanization, and extravagant building projects. Coloured etching by W. Heath, 1829.

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A futuristic vision: the advance of technology leads to rapid transport, sophisticated tastes among the masses, mechanization, and extravagant building projects. Coloured etching by W. Heath, 1829. Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International (CC BY-NC 4.0). Source: Wellcome Collection.

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Description

Rapid transport: passengers travel on a model horse driven by steam; a postman equipped with wings travels by air; a steam-powered waggon travels between Bath and London in six hours; a pneumatic tube takes passengers from Greenwich Hill to Bengal; there is a suspension bridge between Bengal and Cape Town; a giant flying fish takes convicts from England to New South Wales; Irish emigrants are fired from a cannon; etc.

Mechanization: boot-polishing and shaving are powered by steam; bodies are lifted by crane up on the roof of a church for burial in order to foil body-snatchers

Sophisticated tastes among the masses: dustmen eat icecream and pineapples; cat's meat is called "delicate viands for quadrupeds"; a street-vendor sits under a tasselled parasol reading fiction. A tombstone marking the grave of the "Select Vestry" is decorated with dining implements, implying that the introduction of local government elections will stop aldermen etc. from extravagant dining at public expense

Extravagant building projects: Marble Arch and Buckingham Palace; a church with Chinese, Indian and Gothic features; literally building castles in the air to pay off the national debt

Publication/Creation

London (26 Haymarket) : Thos. McLean, [ca. May 1829]

Physical description

1 print : etching, with watercolour ; image 28.6 x 40.4 cm

Lettering

March of intellect. "Lord how this world improves as we grow older." [Paul Pry] Esq.re del. The "March of intellect" or "March of mind" was a popular phrase in the 1820s and 1830s, used seriously by some, mockingly by others, to denote trust in mass education and technological progress to solve the problems of society: see British Museum, op. cit., pp. xliv and 67-68 "Lord how this world improves as we grow older." This is a heavily ironic quotation from the poem The knight and the friar (ca. 1800) by George Colman the younger (1762-1836): "The Lady wrote just what Sir Thomas told her; For, it is no less strange than true, That wives did, once, what husbands bid them do;– Lord! how this world improves, as we grow older!"

References note

British Museum, Catalogue of political and personal satires, vol. XI, London 1954, no. 15779

Reference

Wellcome Collection 37252i

Creator/production credits

By William Heath using the pseudonym Paul Pry, represented by a vignette of Paul Pry

Type/Technique

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