early 19th century engravings aren’t suitable for twitter-- too much information for too low a bandwidth. Ideally, it would be scanned at 600 dpi.
The text reads:
Castlereagh stands like an insinuating salesman, displaying to John Bull a collection of broken statues. John, a stout ‘cit’, in patched but neat clothes, stands directed to the left, his hand deep in his coat-pocket, gazing in dismay at a battered and broken Hercules to which Castlereagh points. Three starving children tug at his coat; an elder boy, emaciated and ragged, stands behind; an infant in the arms of a plump Mrs. Bull is sucking a bare bone. An older boy and girl stand behind, the latter holds by the frock a screaming child who tries to run forward. They exclaim together: “Don’t buy them Daddy! we don’t want Stones. Give us Bread! Give us Bread! Give us Bread!” Castlereagh, who has a star on his coat, and wears long full trousers gathered at the ankle (cf. No. 12840), says: “Here’s a Bargain for you Johnny! Only £35.000!! I have bought them on purpose for you! Never think of Bread when you can have Stones so wonderous Cheap!!” At his feet is a paper: ‘Ministerial Economy a Farce of 1816 by … & Castlereagh’. John answers: “I don’t think somehow that these here Stones are perfect! & had rather not buy them at present—Trade is very Bad & provision very Dear & my family can’t Eat Stones!—Besides they say it will cost £40,000 to build a place to put them in— As the Turks gave them to our Ambassador in his official Capacity for little or Nothing & solely out of compliment to the British Nation—I think he should not charge such an Enormous price for packing and Carriage!!” At his feet: ‘Good News for J Bull—In consequence of the Glorious Peace—Increase of Taxes & Decrease of Trade, the Quartern Loaf will be sold in future for one Shilling & Sixpence.’ An enormously fat and disreputable woman of the Billingsgate or St. Giles type, stands on the right, scowling towards Castlereagh; she says: “Let him take his Stones back again to the Turks we dont want them in this Country!!” Beside her is a little ragged boy. At her feet is a large document: ‘The Grand National Stone Buildg of the Strand or Waterloo Bridge impeded & delay’d by an Enormous & illiberal Demand for the purchase of the Crown land in the Savoy’. On the wall is a bill: ‘Just Publish’d Speculation!! or Travels in the East in search of ruinous fragments of Stone by Lord Elgin’. The more prominent statues, a Hercules, a much mutilated Venus, and Mercury holding a caduceus have no relation to the marbles; a fragment from waist to thighs is mere burlesque; behind these are fragments of frieze based on the originals which had been displayed to the public by Lord Elgin on account of the controversy on their merits. There are also a shattered capital of a pillar, and small fragments of ornament.
c. June 1816