The painting was first exhibited at the
Royal Academy summer exhibition at
Somerset House in 1812, accompanied in the catalogue with some lines from Turner's unfinished epic poem
Fallacies of Hope: Craft, treachery, and fraud –
Salassian force, Hung on the fainting rear! then Plunder seiz'd The victor and the captive, –
Saguntum's spoil, Alike, became their prey; still the chief advanc'd, Look'd on the sun with hope; – low, broad, and wan; While the fierce archer of the downward year Stains Italy's blanch'd barrier with storms. In vain each pass, ensanguin'd deep with dead, Or rocky fragments, wide destruction roll'd. Still on
Campania's fertile plains – he thought, But the loud breeze sob'd, "
Capua's joys beware!" Turner insisted that the painting should be hung low on the wall at the exhibition to ensure it would be viewed from the correct angle. It was widely praised as impressive, terrible, magnificent and sublime. The painting was left to the nation in the
Turner Bequest in 1856, and held by the
National Gallery until it was transferred to the
Tate Gallery in 1910. File:Joseph Mallord William Turner - Snow Storm - Steam-Boat off a Harbour's Mouth - WGA23178.jpg|
J. M. W. Turner, ''
Snow Storm: Steam-Boat off a Harbour's Mouth'', 1842 ==See also==