Laurence Sterne
designed by Thomas Patch
1769
Met Museum 2013.939
The inscription below the image is a quotation from Tristram Shandy:
; and when Death himself Knocked at my door
; ye bad him come again; and in so gay a tone
; of carelss indifference, did ye do it, that he
; doubted of his Commission. There must cert:
; ainly be some Mistake in this Matter," quoth he
T.S.
The quotation is translated into Italian on the right.
The British Museum describes the image as follows:
Satire on Laurence Sterne showing him as an elderly man encountering and dismissing the figure of Death. Sterne rises from a table where he has been writing, on which is a model of Diana of Ephesus in a bell-jar; under the table are two books, "Aris[totle]" and "Ovid" and a large jack-boot; on the wall behind hangs a plan of a fortification (a reference to Uncle Toby in Tristram Shandy) and a clockwork machine which appears to be for tearing up books (it was suggested that Sterne plagiarised earlier works). Death appears through a door on the right, holding out an hour glass in which the sand has run into the lower part; in his other hand he carries a crutch rather than a scythe. In an oval below a moth hovers above a flaming torch.
This image is provided courtesy of the Met Museum, which specifies the image is in the public domain. As part of the Met's Open Access policy, you can freely copy, modify and distribute this image, even for commercial purposes.