Looking into the Accounts by Anonymous

Looking into the Accounts

Anonymous

Framed picture

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  • Sustainably sourced wooden frame
  • Thick bevel-cut mount
  • 200gsm thick fine art print paper
  • 100+ year colour guarantee
  • Ready-to-hang
  • Read more about our framed prints
£64.95
Free delivery when you spend over £75 (UK, EU & US)

Order by 16 Dec for UK delivery (see all dates) (15 Dec for framed canvas)

Image information

Part of the Punch Magazine Collection
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Sizing information

Dimensions
Overall size (inc frame) x cm ( x in)
Depth cm (in)
Artwork x cm ( x in)
Border (mount) cm top/bottom (in)
cm left/right (in)
The paper size of our wall art shipped from the US is sized to the nearest inch.
Model is 5ft4in or 1.62m
Model is 5'4" (1.62m)

Our framed prints

Every framed picture is created by hand in our workshop by specialist framers.

Black, white, silver, gold or natural frames available, supplied ready to hang.

All our frames have a smooth satin finish, and measure 20mm (front face) by 23mm (depth from wall).

Read more about our framed art prints.

Manufactured in the UK, the US and the EU

All products are created to order in our print factories around the globe, and we are the trusted printing partner of many high profile and respected art galleries and museums.

We are proud to have produced over 1 million prints for hundreds of thousands of customers.

Delivery & returns

We print everything to order so delivery times may vary but all framed pictures are despatched within 3 days.

Delivery to the UK, EU & US is free when you spend £75. Otherwise, delivery to the UK costs £10 for a single framed print.

We will happily replace your order if everything isn’t 100% perfect.

Product details Looking into the Accounts

Looking into the Accounts

Anonymous

'Looking into the Accounts', 1861. Mr Bull, the representative of the British people, hangs up his coat and hat, ready for a long stint of checking the nation's finances. Mr Gladstone, perched uncomfortably on a high stool, rather like the descriptions of Dickens's Bob Cratchit in A Christmas Carol, with a quill behind his ear, is caught in the act of closing the ledger marked 'Income Tax'. John Bull is encouraging Gladstone to take a short break so he can have a look at the ledger. This relates to a debate in the House of Commons when the Conservative MP for Buckinghamshire proposed a motion for a Select Committee to sit in judgment on Income Tax and assess if it could not be more equitably levied. Gladstone strongly opposed such a suggestion, but eventually the government was defeated by four votes. Punch goes on to say that Mr John Bull, 'like a sensible commercial man, resolves to make his clerk Gladstone take a holiday, and meantime Mr Bull means to examine his books for himself'. From Punch, or the London Charivari, March 2, 1861.

  • Image ref: 1150284
  • The Print Collector / Heritage-Images

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