The scrapbook opened with: Ebenezer Forrest, An account of what seemed most remarkable in the five days peregrination of the five following persons, viz. Messieurs Tothall, Scott, Hogarth, Thornhill, and Forrest. Begun on Saturday, May 27th, 1732, London: printed for R. Livesay, 1782, containing 10 pages of letterpress and aquatints based on Hogarth's drawings, published well after Hogarth's death. It then proceeds to both large and small engravings, including many of his best known works, and also a number of early works undertaken as book illustrations. For the most part the prints are good early impressions, taken during Hogarth's life and thus subject to his artistic control.
The prints include, among others, complete sets of the key works of the Hogarth canon - An Election Entertainment (1758), Marriage a la Mode (1745), A Rake's Progress (1735), A Harlot's Progress, The Four Times of the Day (1738), Beer Street, Gin Lane (1751), Stages of Cruelty (1751), and Industry and Idleness (1747). In addition, there are a number of engravings after Hogarth by other artists and a wealth of minor material.
