- Doubled; lower margin cut short, most of the address of Schenk cut off; sl. soiled.
= Hollstein 11, the 3rd state (of 3), with the address of P. Schenk Jun. Cat. Mirror of everyday life. Genreprints in the Netherlands 1550-1700, p.338: "In 1664, Van Mieris made a drawing of the subject of drunkenness in which a chamberpot also plays a key role. Once again it was Bary who translated this drawing into a print, six years later. It shows a character resembling a fool holding an empty chamberpot above the head of an inebriated woman, apparently on the point of 'crowning her with a piss-pot', to use a seventeenth-century expression. As a rule, the chamberpot was well-filled for the ceremony, even on the seventeenth-century stage (with water, one hopes)."
AND 1 other by the same after the same: An old woman, emptying a pot through the window (Het goore Besje) (margins trimmed, with loss of caption and address).