The butcher has a bull's head and tail and holds a knife and blade sharpener. Behind him are cuts of meat., Text: We may search all the market, old Bullshead, 'tis true, / But in vain may we look for a monster like you: / For you both cut and steal with such stinking tough chops / 'Tis the sight of the horns, where no customer stops; / No beast such as you, either west, north, or south, / Can be found-- and you're surely the "OLD BULL AND MOUTH., Provenance: McAllister, John A. (John Allister), 1822-1896, collector.
The butcher carries a calf's head and a cow's stomach [i.e.tripe]. "Lights" means lungs. A pile of meat scraps is labeled "scrap.", Text: Butcher, butcher, paunch tripe cleaner, / Than liver and lights you are much meaner / Calves' head to calves' head see incline, / On your shoulders you carry a Valentine-- ., Provenance: McAllister, John A. (John Allister), 1822-1896, collector.
The butcher boy has cow's head and wears an apron covered in blood. He holds a large knife and a sharpener. Behind him is a tub labeled "Blood Tub.". The border shows cupids and hearts; one cupid shoots a heart out of a thimble cannon labeled "Love"; another cupid travels with a heart in a hot-air balloon; and another cupid hammers at a cracked heart below a heart on a fishhook labeled "Caught." "Bowery butcher boy" may refer to the Bowery Bh'oys, and "pluck" can mean animal innards. The valentine suggests that violence will not bother the recipient., Text: How are you? Bowery butcher boy, / I wish you every luck : / Our calf's head scarce will you annoy, / While you possess the Pluck!, Provenance: McAllister, John A. (John Allister), 1822-1896, collector.
Above his head, the butcher's words appear: "I'll take the last of your 'sacred nine' Mews!!" He holds a meat cleaver and a cat. He stands in front of a butcher's block; sausages and hams hang behind him. He has a large waistline and wears an apron. The valentine mocks butchers' dishonesty, violence, and gluttony., Text: The butcher is a jolly dog, / Gets saucy as he grows fat, / Makes "choice round" of horse's meat, / And "chain sausage" out of cat. / I'd marry a butcher, that I would, / If I could only be sure, / He wouldn't butcher his Valentine / And sell her as sugar cure., Provenance: McAllister, John A. (John Allister), 1822-1896, collector.
A butcher with a moustache stands with cleaver in hand. Two cats hang from hooks under the words "Cats wanted.", Text: Go! slaughterer of stolen cats, / And shave the moustache from thy lip -- / Thy sausages are made from rats, / Thy cutlets worse than any chip, / Thy steaks defy the strongest jaws, / Thy mutton comes from aged rams, / Thy pork defies the sharpest saws, / And tainted are thy sugared hams. / Repent, ere yet it is too late, / Or you may butcher for the State., Provenance: Helfand, William H..